A Classic Turn of Phrase: Music and the Psychology of Convention 081228075X

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Table of contents :
A Classic Turn of Phrase
Contents
Preface
PART I: THEORETICAL FOUNDATION
1. What is a Schema?
2. A New Look at Musical Structure
3. Style Structures and Musical Archetypes
4. Defining the Changing-Note Archetype
5. Schematic Norms and Variations
PART II: HISTORICAL SURVEY
6. A Schema Across Time
7. 1720-1754: Scattered Examples
8. 1755-1769: Sharp Increases in Population and Typicality
9. 1770-1779: The Peak
10. 1780-1794: New Complications
11. 1795-1900: A Legacy
12. Conclusions
Appendix: List of Musical Examples Cited or Used in the Statistical Sample
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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A Classic Turn of Phrase Music and the Psychology of Convention

Studies in the Criticism and Theory of Music GENERAL EDITOR Leonard B. Meyer EDITORIAL BOARD Edward T. Cone Janet M. Levy Robert P. Morgan Eugene Narmour

Janet M. Levy. Beethoven’s Compositional Choices: The Two Versions of Opus 18, No. 1, First Movement. 1982 Robert O. Gjerdingen. A Classic Turn of Phrase: Music and the Psychology of Convention. 1988

A Classic Turn

of Phrase

Music and the Psychology of Convention

Robert O. Gjerdingen

My

University of Pennsylvania Press Philadelphia

Permission to reprint material in the text is acknowledged from the following sources: From Scripts, Plans, Goals and Understanding: An Inquiry into Human Knowl-

edge Structures (pp. 41, 70, 77, 99) by Roger C. Schank and Robert P. Abelson, 1977. Hillsdale, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Copyright © 1977 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Reprinted by permission of Lawrence Erlbaum Associates and the authors. From Principles of Perceptual Learning and Development (figure, p. 161) by Eleanor J. Gibson, 1969. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. Copyright ©

1969 by Prentice-Hall, Inc. Used by permission of Prentice-Hall, Inc.

From “Theories of Memory Organization and Human Evolution,” (figure,

p. 163) by Janet L. Lachman and Roy Lachman, in Memory Organization and

Structure, ed. C. Richard Puff, 1979. Orlando, Fl.: Academic Press. Copyright

© 1979 by Academic Press. Used by permission of Academic Press and the

authors.

From “‘A Model for the Encoding of Experiential Information,”’ (figure, p. 410)

by Joseph P. Becker, in Computer Models of Thought and Language, ed. Roger C.

Schank and Kenneth Mark Colby, 1973. New York: W. H. Freeman. Copyright ©

1973 by W. H. Freeman and Co. Used by permission of W. H. Freeman and Co.

Figures 4-4, 5-1, 5-4, 6-2, 9-4, and 12-1; and examples 2-11, 2-19, 4-11, 5-30,

3-33a, 7-23, 7-24c, 7-25, 7-26, 7-27, 7-28, 8-8, 8-10, 8-15, 8-18, 9-1b, 9-3, 9-36, 9-42, 10-27, 10-28, 11-22, 11-23, and 11-35b first appeared in and are reproduced or adapted from Robert O. Gjerdingen, “The Formation and Defor-

mation of Classic/Romantic Phrase Schemata,” Music Theory Spectrum 8 (1986).

Copyright © 1986 by the Society for Music Theory. Used by permission of the Society for Music Theory. Copyright © 1988 by the University of Pennsylvania Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Gjerdingen, Robert O. A classic turn of phrase.

(Studies in the criticism and theory of music) Bibliography: p. Includes index.

1. Musical analysis—Psychological aspects. I. Title. II. Series. ML3838.G45 1988 781.15 87-19184 ISBN 0-8122-8075-X

Flawlessness of an analysis, although it may be taken as the triumph of a method, is a reason for scholarly, theoretical mistrust. Carl Dahlhaus

CONTENTS

Preface

1X

wh

wWnNS

PART I: THEORETICAL FOUNDATION What is a Schema? A New Look at Musical Structure Style Structures and Musical Archetypes Defining the Changing-Note Archetype Schematic Norms and Variations

11 30 55 68

eno”

PART II: HISTORICAL SURVEY

9. 10. 11. 12.

A Schema Across Time 1720-1754: Scattered Examples 1755-1769: Sharp Increases in Population and Typicality 1770-1779: The Peak 1780-—1794: New Complications 1795-1900: A Legacy Conclusions

99 107 137 159 195 229 262

Appendix: List of Musical Examples Cited or Used in the Statistical Sample

2/0

Notes

284

Bibliography

292

Index

295

PREFACE

Once,

in a general discussion of the problems of musical

research, a friend men-

tioned the maxim that ‘when your only tool is a hammer, all your problems look like nails.” Though I found this witty, I did not at first see its relevance to my own concerns with the analysis of classical music. After all, it seemed self-evident that the salient problem of musical analysis was to reduce the surface complexities of actual music to orderly progressions of structurally significant tones. And while skilled musical analysts might disagree over which tones were structurally significant, there was little doubt that a hierarchical system of pitch reduction was the tool to use. At about the same time, my interest in eighteenth-century musical themes and phrases had led me to consider Leonard Meyer’s ideas about archetypal musical schemata. These are normative abstractions of basic melodic, harmonic, or formal pat-

terns so common as to constitute part of the very fabric of classical music. Meyer’s notion of normative abstractions appealed to my musical intuitions but presented a major technical obstacle to reductive analysis. Simply stated, the rather large patterns identified by Meyer are difficult if not impossible to reduce to uniform, simpler constituents. Apparently the same stumbling block had been encountered by the music theorists Fred Lerdahl and Ray Jackendoff,' who, while admitting the intuitive appeal of archetypal musical schemata, nonetheless chose to exclude them from their analytical system in order to preserve its unfettered ability to reduce any musical pattern to a smaller set of constituent tones. To turn one’s back on shared musical institutions merely for the sake of an analytical system seemed, to me at least, unjustified. What profit is there in hammering out a dogmatic analysis of a musical composition if those melodic or formal elements that we perceive to be present must be effaced in the process? Surely it is not the goal of musical analysis to be systematic at all costs. Perhaps this tool of hierarchical pitch reduction was unduly influencing the perceived agenda of musical analysis. My eventual response to the dilemma of choosing between shared musical intuitions and structural-tone reductionism can be summarized by a rewording of the above-mentioned maxim: “*When you suspect that your problems may not be nails,

x

Preface

don’t keep beating them with a hammer—find a better tool!’’ The study that follows is an attempt to find a better tool for understanding how knowledgeable listeners perceive many of the sublimely beautiful musical phrases of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. | do not propose a universal analytical system based on a few tidy axioms and procedures. Nor do I suggest a grand concept—unity, organicism, perfection—on which to base an exegesis of all great music. My methods are far more modest. I present no more than a framework for examining the musical structures present in classical phrases. To be sure, this framework can yield a detailed and revealing analysis of musical structure, but the framework itself merely guides a simple and straightforward examination of musical patterns and their interactions. I would like to thank the people who have influenced and assisted this study. Leonard Meyer’s work on musical archetypes has been a major influence, as have been Eugene Narmour’s theoretical studies on the methodology of musical analysis. Both these scholars contributed greatly to the improvement of this manuscript in its several stages. Thoughtful criticisms or additional musical examples were suggested by Easley Blackwood, William Caplin, Richard Freedman, James Moore, and Lewis

Rowell. Because this study frequently addresses the music of many lesser-known eighteenth-century composers, I have been greatly reassured in having been able to consult Eugene Wolf’s encyclopedic knowledge of this period and to refer to his own work on the phrase structure of early Classic music. The staff of the Albrecht Music Library of the University of Pennsylvania deserves my thanks, as do the many musicologists who have devoted themselves to making eighteenth- and early nineteenthcentury scores available in reliable editions. The musical examples in the text were produced through the artistry of Johanna Baldwin at A-R Editions, Inc. Finally, the financial support of the Mellon Foundation and Carleton College and the editorial assistance of my wife Catherine have helped to bring my good intentions to fruition.

PART I Theoretical Foundation

CHAPTER

l

What is a Schema’?

Hardly a month goes by without the postman delivering yet another ingenious misspelling of my last name. In the past few years the following have appeared: Djaragun Gjerdingla Gjeedingen Gjerdinger Dyjardingen Gerdingen Gerdigen Gjerdigen Gherdingen Gjerdmjen Gjerienen Sjerdingen Gjerkingen Guerdinger

Gijerdingen Ggerdinger Gierdingen Jerdingen Gjerdingon Gerjerdingen Ggerdingen Yunnigan Jernigan Cjerdingen Gjedingen G. J. Erdingen Gjerdingeu Gjeringen

Gjirdingen Gjardingen Gjernigen Dyjerdigan Gennigan Gdjernigen Guerdingen Jordinger Gjordingen Gordine Gjereingen Fjerdingen Cjerdinger G. Jerdingen

Jerdigen Gyerdingen Gjerdenger Gjerdigan Jeridingen Gjerdengen Gjerdingei Ogjerdingen Gjeroingen Dyjerdingen Bjerdingen Gjerdignen Gjerdingens Gjirendgen

As a mere collection of letters of the alphabet, Gjerdingen should be no more perplexing than, say, Washington. After all, both are three-syllable words ten letters long, each with seven consonants and three vowels. They share the morpheme ing and the same pattern of accentuation. Gjerdingen should perhaps be even easier to spell because whereas Washington has three consonants in a row, Gjerdingen never has more than two. The reality of the situation is, of course, quite different. Gjerdingen is much harder to spell because g/ does not fit into an English-language context. While Scandinavians may find the name unexceptional, speakers of English have difficulty remembering it and, as the above list suggests, have problems even perceiving it accurately.

4

Theoretical Foundation

Perhaps having such a name sensitizes one to the crucial role that an interpretive context can play in memory and perception. Even meaning can depend on a particular context. For example, we-have all certainly heard objections to taking a word or phrase out of context. Such objections rightly presume that meaning may be conditional upon a particular interpretive context. Certainly this is the case with music. Whether a tone is dissonant or consonant, for instance, depends entirely on the context in which it is found. So to accurately perceive, understand the significance of, and remember particular musical events, one must in some way understand the contexts in which they occur. But how can one gain other than an intuitive, subjective knowledge of musical context? In other words, is there a theory of context, and if so, are there methods for objectively studying it? If we conceive of an interpretive context as a psychological entity residing in “that portion of the entire perceptual cycle which is internal to the perceiver, modifiable by experience, and somehow specific to what is being perceived,” ' then we may study such a context under the technical term of a schema (pl. schemata). This word gained currency within the psychological vocabulary in the 1930s through its use by Frederick Bartlett in his Remembering: A Study in Experimental and Serial Psychology: ‘““Schema”’ refers to an active organization of past reactions, or of past

experiences, which must always be supposed to be operating in any welladapted organic response. That is, whenever there is any order or regularity of behavior, a particular response is possible only because it is related to other similar responses which have been serially organized, yet which operate, not simply as individual members coming one after an-

other, but as a unitary mass.’

A concept at once so provocative and yet so vaguely defined has been adopted and reinterpreted by scholars in many fields. For example, an information-theory specialist, Selby Evans, views a schema as “‘a set of rules which would serve as instructions for producing in essential aspects a population prototype and object typical of the population.”’* A specialist in pattern perception, Stephen Reed, thinks of schemata as “‘cognitive structures that organize systems of stored information.”* Some cognitive scientists, Joseph Becker for example, define a schema as “a particular formal structure for representing information.” *° Others, David Rumelhart for example, think of schemata as “active processing elements which can be activated from higher level purposes and expectations, or from input data which must be accounted for.”’® And a contemporary cognitive psychologist, Jean Mandler, defines a schema as a mental structure “formed on the basis of past experience with objects, scenes, or events and consisting of a set of (usually unconscious) expectations about

what things look like and/or the order in which they occur.”’’

Of the authors just quoted, David Rumelhart has provided perhaps the most accessible introduction to schema theory. In discussing the general properties or characteristics that all schemata seem to share, he singles out six for special men-

What isa Schema?

5

tion.® First, ‘‘schemata have variables”; since no experience is ever exactly repeated, we must be able to discover intuitively both the dimensions of variation and the range of variation that characterize our generalizations of the world. Second, “‘schemata can embed, one within another”’; a particular schema may be part of a larger network of relationships. Third, “‘schemata represent knowledge at all levels of abstraction.” Fourth, ““schemata represent knowledge rather than definitions.’’ In his words, ‘‘our schemata are our knowledge. All of our generic knowledge is embedded in schemata.”’ Fifth, “schemata are active processes’’; through schemata we can make predictions and form expectations. And sixth, “schemata are recognition devices whose processing is aimed at the evaluation of their goodness of fit to the data being processed.”’ The “input data,”’ “information,” “events,” or “variables” for which schemata provide interpretive contexts can be discussed under the broad rubric of “features.” While our ability to distinguish some features of the world around us appears to be innate, many other features must be learned, especially those defined by culture. To illustrate one theory about how such learning might progress, I reproduce in figure 1-1 a diagram prepared by Eleanor Gibson.’ 99

66

Undifferentiated general responsiveness to stimulation

|

!

Gross selective response to stimulus differences

Differentiation of simple patterns and objects from background stimulation

—_| |

4

Abstraction of

Abstraction of

distinctive features

invariant relations

oy

pneinatte

Progressive differentiation toward

|

l

| |

feature

1 seine

Detection of higher order structure

most

economical

.

J

|

|

v

v

v

Formation of representations

LLL

|

{ [= fr

ti

| |

FIGURE 1-1. Feature acquisition (From Eleanor J. Gibson, Principles of Perceptual Learning and Development [Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,

1969], p. 161. Copyright © 1969. Reprinted by permission of Prentice-

Hall, Inc.)

6

Theoretical Foundation

In specifying a process such as “progressive differentiation toward [the] most economical feature,’’ Gibson rightly implies that our knowledge of features is mutable and capable of refinement. But what governs our selection and refinement of features? Concepts such as need, utility, economy, and function all depend on some larger context. For instance, the phonetic features we learn to perceive in language are intimately tied to the many contexts in which they occur. A full understanding of specific learned features can thus require a careful study of specific contexts, which brings us back to schemata. In music, we learn to recognize many types of features. Some, such as the tone qualities of instruments, can usually be identified in or out of context. But other features, such as harmonic relationships, are highly context-sensitive. Consider the circled section in example 1-1. The various pitches in this circled section (Bb\—-C—D-E>—F) do not together constitute one of the chords—that is, one of the harmonic features—of classical music. Instead, we hear the left-hand accompani-

ment beginning the Alberti-bass figuration of the dominant seventh chord while the right-hand melody continues the triadic descent of the tonic chord. Two harmonic features—tonic and dominant—are perceived as overlapping, because this is the only interpretation consistent with the larger context formed by our schemata for classical phrase structure, melody, and harmonic progression. The type of musical cognition implied by this example requires that a reciprocal relationship exist between features and schemata. Features serve as cues in the selection of schemata, and schemata serve as guides in the detection of features. Schemata can be defined as meaningful sets of features, and features can be defined as meaningful elements in sets of schemata.

EXAMPLE I-1. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in D Major, Op. 10, No. 3 (1797-98), iv, Allegro, meas. 35—37

When a feature—whether an attribute, quality, figure, relationship, or symbol—is presented to us, we attempt to find a context for it, or, more technically speaking, we take it to be the partial instantiation of one of several possible schemata. As more features are perceived, rival schemata can be eliminated and the most likely schema selected. This process is often called data-driven or bottom-up processing because low-level features select a higher-level schema. This type of processing can be very effective when the incoming features are separate, distinct, and

What is aSchema?

7

unambiguous. But the torrent of features that is presumed to flood in upon our senses may make exclusively bottom-up processing difficult. Schema theory asserts, consequently, that once distinctive features of a schema are instantiated, we actively seek out the remaining features. Such a procedure is often called concept-driven or top-down processing, because a higher-level schema directs a search for lower-level features. In those cases where top-down processing locates all but one or two of the expected features, psychologists believe the missing features may be given default values. In other words, human cognition may “‘fill in the blanks” left by perceptions if an overall context seems appropriate. The concurrent top-down and bottom-up processing of noisy, ambiguous features and changing schemata is a fluid, adaptable, and responsive process predictive of the future implications of present events. It represents a sophisticated model of cognition that ex-

plains how we relate an outer world of sensations and percepts to our inner world of

abstractions and concepts. The methodologies developed by cognitive psychologists to study various mental processes can be profitably adapted to investigate musical schemata. Several recently reported experiments suggest not only that different types of musical schemata have a psychological reality, but also that the concept of a schema may prove extremely useful in studying the perception of music.” Among these experiments, one with special relevance to the study at hand was undertaken by the psychologist Burton S. Rosner in collaboration with the music theorist Leonard B. Meyer." Using what is termed a forced-choice experimental procedure, Rosner and Meyer showed that ‘ordinary listeners” could abstract two musical schemata shared by two groups of recorded excerpts of classical music. The subjects were given no descriptions or definitions of the schemata (known only as A or B); they had to learn them intuitively through a process of trial and error. Subjects then used this knowledge to identify instances of schema A or schema B in another group of recorded excerpts. Music theorists have always presumed that listeners perform intuitive musical analyses, but Rosner and Meyer seem to be among the first to have demonstrated it for complex structures in actual artworks. The two schemata used in these experiments are what Meyer has termed gapfill and changing-note archetypes (“‘archetypes”’ being his term for innate or universally valid schemata). The first is characterized by an initial melodic leap, usually upward, followed by a linear descent filling in the space—the gap—created by the leap. “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star” is such a melody (example 1-2). The second is characterized by two melodic dyads, the first leading away from and the second leading back to tonic harmony (example 1-3).

f\ a

aS

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I __I ; i | |_ a. sa | __*__* _ I L—

gap

EXAMPLE

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2

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1-2. A gap-fill melody

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8

Theoretical Foundation

Af

——_

—_—.. Lt 1

harmony: 1

EXAMPLE



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1-3. A changing-note melody

Both these schemata have initial configurations that demand an appropriate terminal configuration for resolution and closure. Thus both schemata have elements of an antecedent-consequent form, though each is quite a different type of abstraction. In the style of classical music, the first two schema-relevant notes of a changing-note melody can be said to imply not only the likely pitches of a second pair of notes but also their likely metrical placement and harmonization. On the other hand, a gap-fill schema is not specific in the implications its initial gap creates. We may expect the melody to descend, but both when and how are largely undetermined. The differences between these schemata are similar to what Roger C. Schank

and Robert P. Abelson call the differences between scripts and plans.'’* While Rumel-

hart uses the single term “schemata’”’ for both higher- and lower-level abstractions of event sequences, Schank and Abelson use different terms. Here is their definition of a script: A script is a structure that describes appropriate sequences of events in a particular context. A script is made up of slots and requirements about what can fill those slots. The structure is an interconnected whole, and what is in one slot affects what can be in another. Scripts handle stylized everyday situations. They are not subject to much change, nor do they provide the apparatus for handling totally novel situations. Thus, a script is a predetermined, stereotyped sequence of actions that defines a wellknown situation. Scripts allow for new references to objects within them just as if these objects had been previously mentioned; objects within a script may take ‘the’ without explicit introduction because the script itself

has already implicitly introduced them.”

Plans are more general: A plan is intended to be the repository for general information that will connect events that cannot be connected by use of an available script or by standard causal chain expansion. A plan is made up of general information about how actors achieve goals. A plan explains how a given state or event was prerequisite for, or derivative from, another state or event. . . : There is a fine line between the point where scripts leave off and plans begin. In a sense it is an unimportant distinction. We are interested in predictions. . . . The point here is that plan-based processing is differ-

What isa Schema?

9

ent in kind from script-based processing. Script-based processing is a much more top-down operation. Furthermore it 1s a process which takes precedence over plan-based processing when an appropriate script is available." The changing-note archetype is a predictable, “‘stereotyped sequence of actions”’ and therefore a scriptlike schema. The gap-fill archetype, on the other hand, is a more general, planlike schema. If Schank and Abelson are correct that we use script-based processing whenever possible and resort to plans only when no script is available, we might use this principle to explain the indication that Rosner and Meyer’s subjects, when given the task of sorting gap-fill from changing-note melodies, learned the changing-note schema first and simply labeled everything else a gap-fill schema.’ They made the lower-level abstraction first and then relied on their script-based knowledge to perform the classificatory task. To circumvent this tendency, Rosner and Meyer devised a new experiment—a gap-fill versus non—gap-fill sorting problem—that forced subjects to abstract this higher-level, planlike schema. For my own study, the prime significance of Rosner and Meyer’s experiments lies in their empirical validation of the concept of complex musical schemata. Lingering doubts about the psychological reality of such schemata can be provisionally set aside and attention focused on the details of specific schemata. In this respect, my differentiation of changing-note and gap-fill structures as scripts and plans promises to shed light on an important aspect of style change. Meyer has suggested, and my own studies confirm, that many of the stereotyped, scriptlike musical phrases of the eighteenth century are transformed into the generalized, planlike musical phrases of the nineteenth century. In the next chapter we will see a transitional example of this process of style change—an excerpt from Schumann’s song *“*Wehmut”’ in which both changing-note and gap-fill schemata are superimposed upon the same phrase. SUMMARY Schema theory affords a promising conceptual framework for the study of musical cognition. But before a general schema theory can be established for music, several issues must be addressed. First of all, because schema theory is a type of structuralism, emphasizing in Bartlett’s words ‘‘an active organization of past experiences,’ any consideration of a musical schema must also be a consideration of musical structure. Simply bringing terms like schema or feature into the vocabulary of musical analysis does not mean that the basic questions of musical structure are displaced. Indeed, questions of how musical structures are perceived and stored in memory become crucial for a psychologically based analysis of music. Even an experimental approach of the kind pioneered by Rosner and Meyer requires an analysis

10

Theoretical Foundation

of musical structure not only for the selection of musical examples but also for the evaluation of the final results. For these reasons, a more detailed investigation of musical schemata must be delayed while,

focused on the subject of musical structure.

in the next chapter, attention is first

CHAPTER

2

A New Look at Musical Structure

Among

the central concerns of music theory are the definition, representation, and

interpretation of musical structures. I have already intimated a definition of musical

structures as cognitive schemata of various degrees of abstraction, and later chapters

will broach the subject of interpreting musical schemata in a historical context. In this chapter, I want to discuss a broad range of topics pertaining to the representation of musical structures, both to challenge some prevalent assumptions and to explain my own manner of structural representation. The chapter begins with a general discussion of mental structures from the perspective of George Mandler, followed by a discussion of tree-structures, hierarchies, and networks. I argue that networks afford representations of musical structure that least distort the manifold relationships inherent in even the simplest music. Several examples taken from published analyses of music demonstrate some limitations of tree-structure representations and point out the need to consider structural networks. The chapter concludes with a consideration of how initially to identify musical schemata and how to prove that a musical schema does or did exist. THE REPRESENTATION

OF STRUCTURE

The diagrams used to represent mental structures—and implicitly the hypotheses that underlie these diagrams—have been much discussed in recent years. The subject is important because, as is becoming evident, there is no visual representation of a structure—whether a memory structure or a musical one—that does not in some way distort or bias the data being represented. Moreover, only by being aware of all the possibilities can a reasonable choice of a representation be made. One might liken the problem to the cartographer’s dilemma of representing a spherical world on a flat surface. Each projection creates a different distortion, so that the only sensible course is to choose the projection that causes the least distortion considering both the

12

Theoretical Foundation

region being represented and the needs of the map’s user. Similar criteria can guide the selection of a representation of mental topography, provided that we understand

both the range of mental structures to be represented and the various means of representing them. To that end, this section begins with an examination of three classes of

mental structures distinguished by the psychologist George Mandler.’ Once these have been considered I will discuss how they may be represented, coming to the conclusion that network representations are the optimal choice for complex musical structures. Mandler’s first class, coordinate structure, is characterized by elements all directly related to one another. Coordinate structures presume no preferred path through them; if one begins at any one element, one can move directly to any of the other elements (figure 2-1). Notice that an arithmetic increase in the number of elements results in a geometric increase in the number of relationships. A coordinate structure of five elements would have ten relationships, six elements fifteen relationships, and so on. Mandler believes that because of the brain’s various processing limitations,

elements.”

mental

coordinate

structures will likely have only two,

Two elements

Three elements

Four elements

O

O

three, or four

O

O

O

O One relationship

O

&

Three relationships

Six relationships

FIGURE 2-1. Coordinate structures

A low-level musical example of a three-element coordinate structure could be an isolated augmented

triad, for example,

C-E—G#

(or C—E—Ab

etc.).

All three

D#—F#,

Et-F#).

pitches are required for the structure to be perceptible, and no single pitch subordinates or necessarily precedes the other two. In like fashion, certain atonal sets of pitches may be considered low-level coordinate musical structures. For example, a basic notion of musical set theory is that a four-element set such as C-D}t—E#—Ft can be presented in any order or spacing, has no reference pitch or “‘tonic,” and gives rise to six intervallic relationships (C-D}#, C—E#,

C—F#,

Dt—E#,

Higher-level examples of purely coordinate structures are rare in classical music but can sometimes be discerned in the music of the avant-garde when, for example, heterogeneous masses of sound are simultaneously juxtaposed.

A New

Look at Musical Structure

Two subordinate

Three subordinate

Four subordinate

elements

elements

elements

13

JN JN AN

FiGURE

2-2.

Subordinate

structures

Mandler’s second class, subordinate structure, is the familiar tree-structure (figure 2-2). A special feature of this structural type, implicit but often ignored, is that its tree-structure representation specifies no direct relationship between the subordinate elements; only subordinate, ‘‘vertical’’ relationships are indicated. For example,

the white circles in figure 2-2 may

have direct,

“horizontal’’

interrela-

tionships, but these relationships cannot be represented by the tree-structures. Treestructures, as will be shown

later, abound in musical analyses. The analysis of an

6

oN

ornamented ascending triad in example 2-1 would be typical.

v

EXAMPLE

2-1. A musical subordinate structure

14.

Theoretical Foundation Two proordinate elements

OO

FIGURE

2-3.

Three proordinate elements

O-O-0

Four proordinate elements

O-0

7-0-0

Proordinate structures

The third class is proordinate or serial structure (figure 2-3). Here one must

move through the elements in a specified order. Proordinate structures are so fundamental to music that they tend to be taken for granted. For instance, a theorist might assume that the tree-structure analysis given in example 2-1 represents the proordinate structure C-E-G—C. But strictly speaking it does not—the essential treestructure would be the same even if the music were played backward. Obviously our minds must be able to relate dozens of elements in order to accomplish even the simplest tasks of cognition. Most psychologists believe this is possible through the combinations we make of basic structures. Figure 2-4 shows how a multileveled, composite structure utilizing various combinations of Mandler’s classes might be organized. This structural complex represents aspects of the opening measure of part 2 of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring. Coordinate structures depict the juxtaposition of subordinately structured chords, and proordinate structures indicate the time- and order-dependent nature of melody and rhythm. The structural complex shown in figure 2-4 is a logical extension of Mandler’s premises but atypical of the structural representations people actually use. Scholars and scientists have apparently preferred a cognitive “‘Mercator projection,” which can result in significant distortions but proceeds from a single premise. For instance, the literature of music theory abounds in structural representations consisting solely of subordinate structures; several such analyses are discussed later 1n this chapter. Clearly, such representations do not imply that proordinate and coordinate structures are absent in music. Rather, it seems obvious that these analyses are a type of shorthand, a culturally sanctioned mode of structural representation where the part is taken as a symbol of the whole. Inasmuch as Mandler’s three modes of relationship are not equally well served by typical structural representations, it may be useful to examine some modes of representation in greater depth, especially considering that with several commonly used modes of structural representation it is possible to convert one mode into another. From the psychological literature, Michael Friendly lists four common “‘structural frameworks”—ways of representing relationships—that are permutable: a taxonomy, a dimensional representation, a tree-structure, and a network.* Assume for the purpose of an illustration that we wish to make a structural representation of the short melody in figure 2-5. The most informal way of graphically representing one aspect of its structure is simply first to draw circles around the pitches that form the two melodic dyads and then to draw a large circle around the entire melody. Friendly terms this approach “taxonomy” (figure 2-5), implying that it is essentially a Classification scheme meant to highlight things that seem to “‘go together.”*

aft ”

af

whl

(0 Eee) me. it’ 2 ae ho O oi

Der

4

4

15

'

'

i]

(

'

LINEAR

DESCENT

——Ht-— «~S SCHEMA ao—i—s- + MELODY

—t

“4

—s—

'

‘,

m4

'



a

a

i]



i)

a

'

16

A

;

\

, ‘

Wl?

r]

oO : hp ae s)he) ee | La | Awe oo UT UL |_____]L___e, ?

Sehn-sucht Lied

er-schal-

len

aus _

ih-

res Ker-kers

Gruft

EXAMPLE 2-15. The linear descent and schema melody of the phrase from Schumann’s ‘‘Wehmut”’

=f ~O—|

SS

FO — he to

Sl 4

t

' ’

' '

GQ) a

—j—+}



$

o_e

tS

I

(4)~G —

_:=C=sé#S#SCNT

moe

| I

re

LINEAR

EB

vs

(

Ff

\ '

SCHEMA

MELODY

EXAMPLE 2-16. The linear descent and schema melody from Haydn, Symphony No. 69 in C Major,

“Laudon’’ (?c1775/6), iv, Presto, meas.

27—30

31

32

Theoretical Foundation

De :

I

—-t

v

7

as

—_e_



I

I

J

yr ry

I

I

v

LINEAR

DESCENT

.

iP

SCHEMA MELODY

EXAMPLE 2-17. The linear descent and schema melody from Mozart, Serenade in D Major, “Posthorn,”” KV 320 (1779), 1, Allegro con spirito, meas. 46-49

D major:

—B

minor

EXAMPLE 2-18. A later restatement (meas. 205-8) of example 2-17

To the extent that Schumann’s phrase shares the traditional pattern network of a linear melodic descent and the schema in question, it can be considered, in the jar-

gon of schema theory, a stereotyped script.'” But there is also a Romantic dynamism

in Schumann’s phrase not accounted for by this script. The effect is explained by Schumann’s incorporation of this Classic script into a Romantic plan,'® which Meyer calls the ‘‘gap-fill archetype.’’'’ That is, the more generalized schema of an initial leap or gap (Gk—-E in Schumann’s phrase) followed by a linear descent or fill 1s presented simultaneously with the stereotyped schema of the last several examples. The network analysis of example 2-19 displays this complex arrangement. Now, if one asks what this network analysis tells us about Schumann’s manner of text setting, several specific answers present themselves. First, Schumann scrupulously aligns the two halves of the schema melody with the poetic line endings— erschallen and Kerkers Gruft. Second, he employs word painting: Lied erschallen (sound a song) follows a leap to the highest pitch in the entire piece; Kerkers Gruft (prison’s tomb) is at the bottom of a long melodic descent and is further darkened by a move toward B minor. Third, Der Sehnsucht Lied erschallen is the only line in ‘“Wehmut”’ not followed by some form of punctuation. Schumann recognizes this lack of poetic closure and melodically connects his phrase halves by means of a large

A New

Look at Musical Structure

33

linear descent. In other words, he uses an appropriate musical pattern to reflect a fine point of poetic structure. And fourth, note that just as the text incorporates Romantic conceits into a stereotyped form, the music incorporates a Romantic plan into a stereotyped script. This important point cannot be gleaned from either tree-structure. Mention was made of the same schema melody occurring in the Mozart and Schumann phrases analyzed above. In the Mozart phrase, this schema melody was clearly presented, its two halves conformant in several respects. In the Schumann phrase, however, the schema melody was not at all obvious. What, then, justifies its appearance in this analysis? The answer is that this schema melody is but one feature in a special set of features making up the musical schema associated with this phrase. Without the presence of the other features of the schema, one might not be justified in singling out the pitches of the schema melody. Of course, one must first justify the schema being invoked. How this might be done is the subject of the next section.

REVERSAL BEFORE CLOSURE '

GAP ————-—————> Zhe

ss

LINEAR

fa

The



’ '

t I

(

'

'

t t

FILL

i

r

;

'

T

\ ,_'

l

—_1_-h®

i

J

:

! \



' '

i

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7 r

tg

A

- —

=

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'

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CONFORMANT

( 1 1

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2

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;

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|

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APPOGGIATURAS

0.9) (

4.

4

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fh

der

Sehn-

sucht

Lied

EXAMPLE

6

v?

2-19. A

‘““Wehmut”’ !®

I4

network

to

"1

er- schal15

14

D:



OU

| ,

\

|

we

vy).

O~0,

! I!

'

1

L

Ail

f

jt

Ta

I,

wae

4

l

Jen

aus

res

V5

of the

t

é

I

T

—t

_—“-..

l '

Ker- kers Gruft I 17

6

vy?

representation

ih-

‘ f



— B min.

phrase

from

Schumann's

34

Theoretical Foundation

SCHEMA VALIDATION Knowledge of schema theory is necessary for research on musical schemata, and knowledge of mental structures can suggest ways in which musical schemata might be represented. But how does one acquire knowledge of a particular musical schema, and what evidence would prove it to be a valid abstraction? One approach, which has already been cited, is psychological testing (see chapter 1). Another approach is to make a careful study of musical scores arid treatises, looking for evidence of shared sets of features. Consider the evidence presented in the case of an eighteenth-century cadential schema. Charles Cudworth, working in the 1940s, examined numerous eighteenthcentury compositions of the so-called style galant. Based on this examination he published an article in which he proposed the cadence in example 2-20 as the galant cadence ‘‘par excellence” —an irreducible galant schema.’ Cudworth did not specify the extent to which this cadence might be varied, if at all. In this regard it may be better described as a cliché (Cudworth’s own term) than as an abstracted schema.

But this cliché could serve as a point of departure for the abstraction of a more general schema. Daniel Heartz has observed that in the treatise Fundamenten des General-Basses (Berlin: I. G. Siegmeyer,

1822), ascribed posthumously to Mozart

and related to his teachings as preserved by Thomas Attwood, a contrapuntal cadence with prepared suspensions is contrasted with the “modern ( gallant)” cadence in example 2-21.” This ‘‘ gallant’’ cadence is close in several respects to the cadence given by Cudworth. Heartz also points out an intriguing coincidence in Mozart’s Don Giovanni where, after the cadential figure shown in example 2-22 (Act I, Finale), Leporello exclaims “Che maschere galanti!’’ (What gallant masqueraders!). Heartz describes the schema underlying the preceding three cadences as a I-IV (ii°)—I{—V-I harmonic progression in a triple meter. While it is true that the schema has this progression, it 1s nevertheless an oversimplification to say that the schema is this progression. A I-IV (ii°)—I{—V—I harmonic progression can be found in all types of musical styles and, even if in a triple meter, may sound very little like these galant cadences. A defensible definition of the schema underlying these cadences would require that the norms and interrelationships of meter, harmony, rhythmic groupings, voice leading, melody, and texture all be specified. Of course a consideration of just three cadences could yield only provisional specification of the schema. Many more galant cadences would need to be examined before a historically accurate abstraction of a schema could be claimed to have been made. Examining many individual compositions for the presence of a particular schema creates a type of external, statistical evidence. Internal evidence of a schema is also possible. For instance, the existence of slight variations in repetitions or restatements of a musical phrase can lead to insights concerning what is central or peripheral to its underlying schema. As an example of internal evidence, let us examine the three statements of a theme from an early symphony by Joseph Haydn

A New Look at Musical Structure

EXAMPLE 2-20. The galant cadence of Charles Cudworth

EXAMPLE 2-21. A cadence given in Fundamenten des General-Basses

EXAMPLE 2-22. Mozart, Don Giovanni (1787), Act I, Finale, Minuetto da lontana, meas. 218-19

35

36

~=3>6 Theoretical Foundation

(In the rel. maj.)

—v

—I

EXAMPLE 2-23. Haydn, Symphony No. 14 in A Major (1764), iii, Trio, Allegretto, meas. 29-32, 33-36, and 49-52

shown in example 2-23. The differences in melodic contour, rhythm, bass line, and harmonic detail are such that each statement is easily distinguishable from the others. Yet the similarities in overall harmonic movement (the second phrase, of course, being in the relative major), the prominence of the melodic scale degrees 1—7 and 4-3, and the metric placement of these features are obvious enough to suggest that all three statements share a common schema. As a first approximation of the central tendencies of this schema, those features shared by all three statements are shown at the bottom of example 2-23. The phrases in example 2-23 have more in common than the simple schema presented at the bottom of the example. But this provisional schema does provide a point of departure for further studies; it is a hypothesis that can be tested on still other phrases. For instance, the schema derived from the three Haydn phrases could

A New

Look at Musical Structure

37

(In the dominant)

|—————

V

V

EXAMPLE 2-24. Louis Massonneau, Symphony in E} Major, (c1792), 1, Vivace, meas. 19-22, 52-55, and 156-59

Op.

3, Book

1

be compared with the features shared by three statements of a theme by Louis Massonneau (1766-1848) (example 2-24). Ultimately every type of evidence supporting the abstraction of a musical schema is relevant: similarities in phrases that “‘sound alike,” central tendencies in variations, examples from music treatises, research in the psychology of music, historical music criticism (to the extent that it can be interpreted), and evidence that a schema has a particular function (cadential, thematic, linking, etc.). But the goal of uncovering evidence is not simply to compile it. The goal must be to seek evidence that can be arranged in a coherent pattern that either supports or calls into question a theory of musical structure. The theoretical and empirical aspects of researching musical schemata must function together.

38

Theoretical Foundation

SUMMARY The review of basic mental structures and structural representations given at the beginning of this chapter suggested that network representations offer the most flexible and least constrained means of graphically displaying musical structures. Because tree-structure representations dominate the literature of music theory, several com-

parisons were made between tree-structure and network representations of the same musical phrases. In each case, the network representation was able to provide a more psychologically defensible analysis by avoiding the graphic and procedural constraints associated with tree-structure representations. An important element in each network representation was a musical schema. Several general suggestions were given for how one might abstract and identify a musical schema. But identification is merely a first step; the problems involved in clearly defining a schema raise significant issues that require the extended discussion provided in the following two chapters.

CHAPTER

3

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes In the first chapter several basic concepts of cognitive psychology were discussed. Special emphasis was given to the concept of schemata—“‘large, complex units of knowledge.”’' In this chapter I discuss several music-theoretic concepts that can be applied to schema research. Most useful in this regard is Eugene Narmour’s threefold categorization of musical structures: style forms, style structures, and idiostructures. These categories provide a necessary terminology for describing the complex interplay of different musical dimensions at various levels of structure. I argue that a style structure, considered as a specific complex of features, is a musical schema. Later in the chapter, I present a different but closely related approach to musical schemata—Leonard Meyer’s concept of musical archetypes. I discuss his definitions of form and process—the basic elements in a Meyerian archetype—and introduce his “changing-note archetype,”’ a term encompassing a common group of eighteenth-century musical schemata, one of which will be carefully analyzed in the remainder of this book. NARMOUR’S STRUCTURAL

CATEGORIES

Consider the various meanings of “melodic triad” in examples 3-la, b, and c. Example 3-la merely names an abstract concept, example 3-1b presents a stable melodic/durational complex with an implied C-major harmony, and example 3-1c shows a latent, destabilizing aspect of this complex—-G—E-C as the beginning of a series of descending thirds—brought out by the effects of a larger context. In each of fh

2 UJ

EXAMPLE 3-1. Various meanings of melodic triad

40

Theoretical Foundation

these three cases, “‘melodic triad’’ has a distinct interpretation expressible through theoretical concepts developed by Eugene Narmour—his “style forms,” “‘style structures,” and “‘idiostructures.”” Narmour writes: By style form, I mean those parametric entities’ . . . which achieve enough closure to enable us to understand their intrinsic functional coherence without reference to the functionally specific, intraopus context from which they come. . . . Combining all the style forms in the various parameters . . . produces a specific functional complex of style structures which together create a network of relationships I will call the

idiostructure.°

At first glance Narmour’s definitions might appear to describe a hierarchy in which style forms are at the bottom, style structures are in the middle, and an idio-

structure is at the top (figure 3-1). Yet a closer reading of Beyond Schenkerism* reveals that a simple subordinate or superordinate relationship is lacking between any two of these terms. The following attempt at an exegesis of Narmour’s terms should clarify the intended interrelationships.

|

An idiostructure

tT

ar

Several style structures

Te |

|

|

Ar

Numerous style forms

FiGuRE 3-1. Oversimplification of Narmour’s categories

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes

41

Style Forms Style forms may be defined as those parametric entities which achieve enough closure so we can understand their functional coherence without reference to the specific intraopus contexts from which they come—all those seemingly time-independent patterns, large and small, from parameter to parameter, which recur with statistically significant frequency.” The collection of all the style forms found in a particular musical style is a “‘lexicon’”’ of the ‘‘stylistic language’’— ‘tan encompassing circle of ‘facts’ into which all relationships of similarity in the given repertory may be placed.’’® That is, just as the English word robin has a recognized meaning independent of the sentences in which it may be found, so in classical music the style form melodic triad is a recognizable pattern of pitch succession independent of its occurrence in an individual composition. Narmour cites the ascending tetrachord G-A—B-C as another example of a style form.’ Again, this pattern involves only a single musical dimension—pitch succession—and, like a melodic triad, it can occur at more than one level in a musi-

cal hierarchy. The very existence of the terms melodic triad and ascending tetrachord suggests a prior recognition of the “‘functional coherence”’ of the patterns and reinforces Narmour’s contention that style forms are “constructed classes of things.”’* In addition to melodic style forms, there are style forms in the dimensions of harmony and durational proportion: for example, a perfect authentic cadence is a style form of tonal harmony, and iteration (e.g., JJJ etc.) is a style form of durational proportion (1:1:1...).

Style Structures Narmour’s definition of style forms is elaborated by means of the dialectical opposition that he establishes between style forms and style structures: In order to avoid creating an ocean of lifeless facts, devoid of operational significance, and in order not to deny facts their proper habitat, . . . the style analyst will attempt to restore the syntactic function of style forms by arranging them in various specific contexts according to their statistically most common occurrences. The contexts which result from such arrangement can be called style structures in the sense that they are directly tied to and contribute to the structure of real pieces, not just to constructed classes of things, as are style forms. Unlike the description of style forms, the identification of style structures involves ascribing time-

dependent function to patterns.’

From the passage above, and from Narmour’s further discussion of style structure, it is possible to construct a table of oppositions (figure 3-2).'° This table demonstrates

42

Theoretical Foundation

Style Forms lexicon context free extraopus norms

VS.

Style Structures

°

syntax context specific intraopus and interopus norms

constructed classes

parts of actual structures

time-independent isolated parameters mode abstract

time-dependent parameters in combination code concrete

FiGuRE 3-2. A contrasting of style forms and style structures

that style forms and style structures are not in a relationship of part to whole but rather in a relationship of antithesis: ““The fixed relationship between these two poles at any level in a work will therefore account for that complex of things we call

style.” '' As a simple example of a style structure, recall the melodic triad presented

earlier as example 3-1b (example 3-2). The constituent style form participates in a specific structural complex involving harmony (an triad) and durational proportion (the pattern long-short-long: J more complex example of a style structure, one might place the example

3-2 in the context of the V’—I cadence, a harmonic

**melodic triad”’ implied C-major J|d })..Asa melodic triad of

style structure, as in

example 3-3. In this case the resulting complex itself is a style structure, and it creates relationships not found in either of its constituent style structures. The E in the melody, for instance, no longer functions purely as part of a C-major descending triad but rather participates in and colors the dominant seventh chord on G.

EXAMPLE 3-2. A

style structure

vi

I

EXAMPLE 3-3. Another meaning of style structure

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes

43

Idiostructures Both style forms and style structures are classlike concepts abstracted from real pieces; style forms occur with “statistically significant frequency” and style structures are arrangements of style forms “‘according to their statistically most common occurrences.”’’* In contrast, an idiostructure is often unique. It is the “‘network of

relationships” " created by the interaction of the closural properties of one or more

style structures with the nonclosural implications inherent in any real musical movement. A second table of oppositions can be gleaned from Narmour’s discussion of

how style structures and idiostructures differ (figure 3-3). Again we see that an

antithesis is established—a dialectical opposition between style structure and idiostructure. As an example of an idiostructure, refer back to example 3-1c. There a realization of nonclosural implications inherent in the style structure of example 3-1b creates a unique network—‘“‘melodic triad” as both a formal and a processive entity.

Style Structures closural

VS.

Idiostructures nonclosural

the signified

the signifying

structural

structuring

the formed

more treelike form stability formal

formation

heavily networked content mobility processive

FiGuRE 3-3. A contrasting of style structures and idiostructures

The Interrelationships of Style Forms, Style Structures, and Idiostructures Just as it would be misleading to consider a style form as the complete opposite of a style structure, or to consider a style structure as the complete opposite of an idiostructure, so it would be misleading to view the three terms as separate levels in a hierarchical system. The key to understanding Narmour’s formulation of these terms lies in his distinction between style analysis and critical analysis. The one emphasizes movement from the specific to the general; the other, movement from the general to the specific (figure 3-4).'° Given the previous definitions of Narmour’s terms,

44

Theoretical Foundation

a style structure must be more specific than a style form, and an idiostructure must be more specific than a style structure. These two relationships allow the three terms to be ordered along the continuum in figure 3-5.

Critical analysis | ABSTRACT

>

GENERALITY

«
|

Narmour’s categories in relation to critical and style analysis

In view of this larger context, it should now be possible to understand the way in which a style structure may be both the dynamic “‘opposite”’ of a static style form and the static “‘opposite”’ of a dynamic idiostructure. The antitheses Narmour develops between these terms are only in relation to his two analytical orientations: the work of the style analyst will fall between the poles of style forms and style structures; the work of the critical analyst will fall between the poles of style structures and idiostructures. The distinctions between style forms, style structures, and idiostructures need not be actually represented by differences in musical material. Rather, they may depend on the analyst’s viewpoint—a viewpoint that depends on the goals of the inquiry. The present study focuses on style structures, though it also constitutes an investigation of style forms and idiostructures. These latter categories receive less emphasis, but the reader should try to keep them in mind, because changes in style structures are often attributable to changes in these other categories.

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes

45

Narmour and Schemata There appears to be general agreement among psychologists that feature recognition is a first step in complex pattern recognition. The first term in Narmour’s structural

typology is the parametric style form. Are style forms therefore distinctive features?

They may be—if one restricts style forms to an immediate, low level of structure. But distinctive musical features may also be composed of more than one parameter, or be characterized by timbre, texture, or some other attribute that resists scaling. Style forms then account for some but not all musical features. The definition of a style form as a purely parametric entity probably also needs to be altered when long time spans are involved. The way people remember things in the immediate past and the more remote past is not the same, a phenomenon usually attributed to differences between short-term and long-term memory. Researchers have noted that information held in short-term memory must often be transferred to long-term memory within five or six seconds (as a norm) or be forgotten."* This transfer almost certainly involves a loss or restructuring of some information. For instance, the minute differences in pitch or duration that can be distinguished between two tones separated by only a few seconds may become indistinguishable over the time periods associated with long-term memory. Inasmuch as high-level structures can have elements widely separated in time, it is questionable whether our conception of them permits the discriminations implied by a parametric analysis. These qualifications notwithstanding, the concept of style forms is still quite useful because there is little doubt that certain patterns do retain something of their identity even though they may be situated in quite different contexts. In this study I will use the term style form to signify the relatively abstract, context-free constituents of schemata. These constituents may at times involve more than a single musical parameter.

The idea of style structures is very close to the notion of cognitive schemata. Both concepts emphasize a set of features combined to form a specific structural complex. What Narmour does not emphasize 1s that if the number of ‘“‘specific contexts”’ is not to become infinitely large, the concepts of prototype, ideal, abstraction, or norm—all common to schema theory—must hold for style structures. He does not address this topic in Beyond Schenkerism, possibly because he was sensitive about positing privileged structures that were in many ways similar to those of Heinrich Schenker. Narmour’s goal was to show the dangers inherent in taking one privileged structure as both an axiom and a goal valid for all analyses. In the jargon of cognitive science, such an approach would be an entirely concept-driven or topdown processing of musical information. On the other hand, Narmour’s position in

Beyond Schenkerism sometimes suggests a thoroughly data-driven or bottom-up method of analysis. Because schema theory, as was discussed in the first chapter, assumes that both types of information processing—top-down and bottom-up—occur together, I enlarge Narmour’s concept of a style structure to align it more closely with that of a schema. Concrete examples of a style structure treated as a musical schema will be found in chapters 4 and 5.

46

Theoretical Foundation

Narmour’s concept of idiostructures has no single equivalent in the literature of cognitive psychology, though it has close affinities with the term idiolect as used in psychological studies of linguistics.-The joint closural and nonclosural properties of an idiostructure are not equivalent to the alternate interpretations of the ambiguous figures commonly found in psychological texts. Ambiguous figures present two mutually exclusive possibilities, whereas idiostructures present merged, concurrent meanings. Because the nonclosural properties of an idiostructure extend beyond a schema’s boundaries, these nonclosural aspects can be predictive of musical patterns that are likely to follow. This implicative feature of idiostructures will become important later in this study when musical contexts larger than a single schema are considered. LEONARD MEYER

AND ARCHETYPES

Some of the most significant investigations of musical schemata have been carried out by Leonard Meyer. Because his work on musical archetypes (1.e., innate schemata) forms one of the foundations for the present study, I want to discuss what he

means by archetype and how he defines musical archetypes. Meyer has been influenced by concepts from the fields of psychology, literary theory, the theory of history, and natural science. Although it may be from the field of literary theory, especially the work of Northrop Frye,’’ that Meyer adopted the concept of archetypes, his formulation of the concept is in terms of cognitive psychology. Meyer writes: Archetypal patterns and traditional schemata are the classes—the “rules of the game,”’ in Koestler’s phrase [Arthur Koestler, The Ghost in the Machine (New York: Macmillan, 1968), p. 105]—1in terms of which particu-

lar musical events are perceived and comprehended.”

Meyer uses the terms archetypal patterns and schemata ‘‘more or less inter-

changeably.”’ '’ Even the hybrid term “archetypal schemata” is employed.” He does

recognize a theoretical distinction between archetype and schema: an archetype is the result of “‘physiological and psychological constraints presumed innate in human behavior,”’ while a schema is a norm established as ‘‘the result of learning.’ *’ But he feels that in practice the distinction breaks down. The two categories commingle, because stylistic norms are probably based on innate factors of cognition, and innate factors of cognition are likely to be manifested in stylistic norms. Although innate constraints are presumed to be universal, stylistic change and diversity are accommodated because “different sets of conventional constraints may satisfy such [universal] requirements.’’” In the following discussion I will restrict myself to the

term archetype when referring to Meyer’s concept, in order to emphasize his concern with cognitive universals and to distinguish his concept of archetype from the several related schemata that can be subsumed under it.

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes

47

Meyer clearly views archetypes as central to the understanding of music: [Archetypes] establish fundamental frameworks in terms of which culturally competent audiences (not only members of the general public but also creators, performers,

critics, and scholars) perceive,

comprehend,

and respond to works of art. For what audiences enjoy and appreciate are neither the successions of stimuli per se, nor general principles per se, but the relationship between them as actualized in a specific work of art. Just as we can delight in the play of a particular football game only if we understand the constraints governing the actions down on the field (the rules, strategies, physical conditions, etc.), so we can enjoy and appreciate the playful ingenuity and expressive power of works of art only if we know—and such knowledge may be tacit: a matter of ingrained habits and dispositions—the constraints that governed the choices made by the artist and, consequently,

shaped the process and form of the particular

work of art. Thus, archetypes are, in a sense, embodiments of fundamental stylistic constraints. As such, they connect understanding to other aspects of aesthetic experience.” Nevertheless, though archetypes are important, he is unwilling to give them precedence over two concepts that he considers more fundamental—form and process. Before further examining Meyer’s formulation of archetypes it is important to understand exactly what he means by these two terms.

Form

When reading the work of Leonard Meyer one must realize that the word form is being used in a special way—as “form-as-the-complement-of-process.”’ While in ordinary parlance it may be true that any musical structure has some type of form, when we say that something both to its hierarchic structure highest level. When both types ferentiation, then relationships

will be said to be a form.”

is a particular form . . . we are referring and to its conformant organization on the of relationship are articulated by clear difwill be formal. That is, the complex event

Another way to interpret the phrase “‘articulated by clear differentiation” is as ‘characterized by discontinuity.”’ The special emphasis on discontinuity serves to set

form apart from the continuity that characterizes process.” For Meyer, pure repeti-

tion (emphasizing the separateness of the repeated entities), the return of earlier ma-

terial (discontinuous because of the intervention of some contrasting section), and

strong, continuity-breaking closure are the obvious indicators of form. The first two

procedures signal the beginning of a form, the last, closure, the ending of a form.

48

Theoretical Foundation

From the point of view of form alone, the only relationships possible between two entities are varying degrees of conformance or contrast.

Process

‘Process continuation is the norm of musical progression.” *° Meyer bases this contention on the Gestalt /aw of good continuation: “A shape or pattern will, other things being equal, tend to be continued in its initial mode of operation.”’” There are, of course, obvious musical embodiments of good continuation: a stepwise melodic progression, the harmonic circle-of-fifths progression, and the truly continuous processes of accelerando or ritardando and crescendo or decrescendo. But Meyer, whose name is closely associated with the application of Gestalt laws to musical analysis, was one of the first to point to the limitations of Gestalt laws: The vital role occupied by learning in conditioning the operation of Gestalt laws and concepts indicates at the outset that any generalized Gestalt account of musical perception is out of the question. Each style system and style will form figures in a different way, depending upon the melodic materials drawn upon, their interrelationships, the norms of rhythmic organization, the attitudes toward texture, and so forth. . . . Nor does it seem that, even within the confined limits of a particular style, a precise and systematic account of musical perception solely in Gestalt terms is possible. . . . Although there is ample reason for believing that the laws developed by Gestalt psychologists, largely in connection with visual experience, are applicable in a general way to aural perception, they cannot be made the basis of a thoroughgoing system for the analysis of musical

perception and experience.”

To explain those syntactic relationships that seemed inexplicable by reference to Gestalt laws, Meyer turned to the notion of probability. He made the quite reasonable assumption that learning and general musical experience condition listeners to expect likely successions of musical events. ‘“‘Any aspect of musical progress governed by probability relationships, whether these relationships are products of learning or the result of relationships created within the context of the particular work, establishes preferred modes of continuation.” ‘Modes of continuation’ are obviously not discontinuous, that is, formal, but rather continuous and therefore pro-

cessive. Consequently, the word process is extended to describe all relationships that initiate or resolve some expectation. As a further extension, the word process approaches the meaning of syntax to the extent that musical syntax, in the view of Meyer and many other theorists, involves the interplay of musical implications and their suitable realizations.

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes

49

Form, Process, and the Tertium Quid The dichotomous exposition of form and process presented in Emotion and Meaning in Music is tempered in Explaining Music. Even in the latter work it is true that hierarchical musical structure is outlined as an alternation of form and process across structural levels (figure 3-6).*° Yet there appears in Explaining Music a tertium quid, a third category that falls outside of the form-versus-process dichotomy. For the present discussion the most important structural type within this new category is

that of ‘‘symmetrical patterns.” * LEVEL 3

—>»> Form |[

‘\

|

LEVEL

2

Forms [

LEVEL

}

|

}

|

|

)

(}

|

___ (Closure)

_

Process

4\

rN

Process ”

Forms CL ICICICI) FiGuRE 3-6.

|

ca

COOIOICI

y aa

OOIOD

The alternation of form and process across structural levels

While the definition of form can be used to explain musical structures characterized by immediate repetition, or return after contrast, and the definition of process can be used

to explain

musical

structures characterized

by continuation,

or

implication and realization, symmetrical patterns seem to require a different approach. “‘In symmetrical melodies, the relationship between successive events is such that one event mirrors the patterning of another. In other words, there is a balance of motion and countermotion.”” In music, balance is, of course, a concept difficult to define by recourse to notions of conformance, continuation, implication,

or probability. At the same time, a balanced, mirrored relationship is neither uncommon nor unnatural. In response to this problem, Meyer takes a different approach to each of the three musical structures he labels as symmetrical. The first type, complementary melodies—melodic

structures that ascend and then descend, or vice versa—resists

simple explanation in terms of pure form or process; a complementary melody need be neither discontinuous nor implied. Instead, Meyer concentrates on explaining the possible higher-level implications that the linear vectors of the separate halves may

50

= Theoretical Foundation

_. Axis of symmetry }o

| e

|

e

| @

Model

|

mn [°

@

¢

4 (Implied continuation)

|

| Complement

‘| For instance:

@

é

|

Model

Complement

Brahms, Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, Op. 68 (1876), ii: Un poco allegretto e grazioso, meas. 1-9 FiGuRE 3-7.

Complementary melodies

|

@eveee @oereee @ecces @--

Model

For instance: fy 10 /

Model

iT

pee |

|

Mirror

N14

Mirror

7

Antonin Dvofak, Symphony No. 9 in E Minor, “From the New World,” Op. 95 (1893), iv, Allegro con fuoco, meas. 10-12 FIGURE

3-8.

Axial

melodies

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes

51

For instance:

Johann Georg Albrechtsberger, Symphony in D Major (1770), ili, meas.

FiGurRE 3-9.

1-3

Changing-note melodies

engender (figure 3-7). The second type, axial melodies—melodic structures that oscillate about a central axis—is characterized in negative terms. Because a clear ascending or descending line is not realized within the structure, °**a true syntactic

process is not generated,”’* and “implication [on the highest level] is absent.” * If the structure is not a process, then “the relationship between model and mirror is

primarily formal.” * (See figure 3-8.) Changing-note melodies, Meyer’s third type of symmetrical pattern, “‘are superficially similar to axial ones.” *° (See figure 3-9.) But Meyer feels that the changing-note structure is more implicative than an axial pattern

because it involves ‘“‘motion away from and back to stability.”’ *’

What is important for the study of musical schemata is Meyer’s identification of historically valid structural abstractions that are specific to only one or two hierarchical levels and that tie specific patterns of melodic structure to specific formal plans. These entities are neither purely formal nor purely processive; rather, they are form-process amalgams, one of which Meyer identifies as an archetype.

Archetypes In Meyer’s general discussion of archetypes in Explaining Music,” he employs the word archetype almost as a synonym for ideal: “‘Such norms are abstractions. One

52

Theoretical Foundation

cannot find an archetypal gap-fill melody or an ideal cadential schema in the literature of tonal music.” It is only much later, in the article “Exploiting Limits,” that his definition of archetype becomes specific: There are cases . . . in which fundamental similarities of form or process transcend traditional stylistic boundaries. Some kinds of patterning seem, if not universal, at least archetypal within one of the major cultural traditions. . . . The most patently archetypal patternings are, one suspects, those that couple compellingly coherent processive relationships with patently ordered formal plans. There are both archetypal processes . . . and archetypal forms. . . . An archetypal pattern, as I intend the term, com-

bines such a process with such a form.”

In Narmour’s terms, the emphasis has shifted from constituent style forms to composite style structures. Archetypes, as form-process amalgams, become historical and cognitive entities in their own right. If, as Meyer states, they ‘“‘help listeners to comprehend and remember the particular patterns in which they are actualized,” “** then archetypes are central to music perception and must be given serious consideration in musical analysis. In an idealized scenario, archetypes would be identified through rigorous stylistic analysis and then form the starting points of serious critical analysis. Employing an archetype in musical criticism must, of course, involve the assumption that the archetype used is both historically and cognitively a valid entity. But this is not to say that every archetype must be actually derivable from one or more general principles. Meyer appears to have considered it necessary to refute the implication that an archetype might serve critical analysis better if simply taken as a stylistic given rather than as a specific form or process: It may occasionally seem that archetypes have been given a kind of Platonic reality or have been reified in some way. Thus it should be emphasized that, in my view, archetypes are cognitive constructs abstracted from particular patternings that are grouped together because of their similar syntactic shapes [= processes] and/or formal plans. That is, archetypes are classlike patterns that are specially compelling because they result from the consonant conjoining of prevalent stylistic conventions with the neuro/cognitive proclivities of the human mind.” His defense—that an archetype (the reified whole) is a composite or “*consonant conjoining”’ of stylistic conventions and cognitive proclivities (the more fundamental parts)—is probably unnecessary. After all, a description of an archetype specifying, for example, precise interactions of structural tones, rhythmic groupings, metrical placements, and harmonic progressions would be far less reified and idealized than a description of a basic form or process.

Style Structures and Musical Archetypes

53

The Changing-Note Archetype For review, figure 3-10 shows my representation of the changing-note melodic structure as specified in Explaining Music (Meyer also included its inversion under the same rubric).** Although Meyer suggested that this melodic structure “might be thought of as [an] archetypal pattern,” it was only several years later, in his article “Exploiting Limits,” that he specifically discussed this structure as an archetype.

iv

oIo-l |

seegeieagee lenis |

|

Model

|

|

]

J

Parallel!

| FiGureE 3-10.

Changing-note melodies

Indicative of this change in orientation is the fact that instead of the abstract configuration shown in figure 3-10, he now presents the archetype as a detailed polyphonic complex with hierarchical formal levels (example 3-4).* If this complex pattern is an archetype, as Meyer persuasively argues, then it cannot simply be a combination of one archetypal form with one archetypal process. Rather, it must be a complex of structures and features, many of which Meyer does not make explicit. For example, in the text of the article in question, references are frequently made to rhythmic groupings and metrical placement. Yet an abstraction of these elements is not transferred to Meyer’s analytical model. This and other analytical problems are taken up in the next chapter, where the relationship between an archetype and a schema is explored.

a: b:

m

(x) (5)

b:

m’

y= 8—7

(x’) (2)

A(I+1)

m_

Cc:

y’

y

(5)

°8

4-3

m'

_

f

- 7

98

For instance:

1- Vii)

V-I

1

Sie ee eee ees vo

S

c:

a:

A(+1)

lgnaz Pleyel, piano arrangement by Hummel (1789) of Benson No. 432, iii, meas. 97—100

EXAMPLE 3-4. Meyer’s specification of a particular changing-note archetype

1

54

Theoretical Foundation

SUMMARY Schema theory, as presented in the first chapter, is abstract in order to be applicable to diverse cognitive tasks. Once a specific cognitive task 1s identified—for example, listening to music—general schema theory can be supplemented by additional concepts of more limited applicability. In this chapter, the general notion of musical schemata has been supplemented with the more specific concepts of style structures and archetypes; the terms style structure, form, and process have been added to the general category of distinctive features; and, under the concept of idiostructures, the principle has been introduced that musical patterns have latent destabilizing features. An understanding of these special terms, all taken from the work of Narmour and Meyer, helps to provide a background for the type of detailed musical analysis that follows. The specific object of this analysis will be Meyer’s changing-note archetype, a ““symmetrical”’ pattern with a bipartite, mirrored structure.

CHAPTER

4

Defining the Changing-Note Archetype Several criteria guided the selection of a musical schema for this study. The chosen schema had to be common enough that anyone familiar with classical music would recognize it; it had to be simple enough that its smallest detail could be studied in

depth; and it had to avoid being so abstract that its features and relationships could not be clearly defined. Lastly, the schema had to be a type of structure recognized by other scholars but not as yet fully investigated. Leonard Meyer’s changing-note archetype seemed a good choice; it is common, simple, not too abstract, and recognized by other scholars.' Furthermore, an investigation of this archetype promised to provide an interesting case study of a style structure and its component style forms. CHANGING-NOTE PATTERNS

In Meyer’s book Explaining Music, the term changing-note archetype refers to a structural melody with scale degrees 1—7...2—1 (or 1—2...7—1, its inversion). In his later articles the same term also refers to the structural melodies with scale degrees 3-2...4—3, 3—4...2—3, and 1-—7...4—3.* Hypothetical versions of all these patterns are given in example 4-1. What set of features do these patterns have in common? Obviously they all have a bipartite, AA’

form and a I-V—V-I

harmonic progression, but then so do

many other patterns. For instance, example 4-2 combines such a form and harmonic pattern with an ascending melody. If the changing-note archetype is to be distinguished from example 4-2, then some definition of the group of possible core melodies is necessary. Inasmuch as the patterns variously begin on different scale degrees, end on different scale degrees, or progress by different intervals in different directions, the only thing common to all is an S-like contour. But even the set of features comprising an AA’ form, a I-V—V-I

56

= Theoretical Foundation

(a)

() ———>@

)————>0)

EXAMPLE 4-1. Changing-note archetypes 1)

> Q)

Q——

@

EXAMPLE 4-2. AA’ form and I-V—V-I harmony without a changing-note melody

Defining the Changing-Note Archetype

$7

harmonic progression, and an S-like contour for the structural melody is not sufficiently discriminating. This feature set would include a rather rare type of phrase not mentioned by Meyer—5-—4...6—5 (example 4-3).’ This same set of features would exclude the very common J-ii1°—V-—I harmonic progression often heard with changing-note melodies, as in example 4-4. Also excluded would be the common ABA’ form of many changing-note melodies (example 4-5).

EXAMPLE 4-3. The changing-note pattern 5—4...6—5

1

ii®

vi

1

EXAMPLE 4-4. Changing-note archetype with I-1i°— V’—I harmony

EXAMPLE 4-5. Miniature ABA’

form

58

Theoretical Foundation

The only feature common to all these phrases is a changing-note melodic contour, but to argue that one criterion alone determines class membership subverts the whole concept of complex musical-schemata. Such an approach would represent a reversion to the methods of taxonomy. The complete specification of a complex musical schema thus must involve more than a categorization of one of its salient features. According to Rumelhart, ““A schema contains, as part of its specification, the network of interrelations that is believed to normally hold among the constituents of the concept in question.’’* A polyphonic schema, hierarchically structured in both musical space and time, is above all a relational complex, and the relationships between elements of different parameters may be as significant as the relationships between elements of the same parameter. A different approach to the problem of defining the overall changing-note archetype is to view each of Meyer’s specific patterns as a separate schema. After all, Meyer does not present these patterns as actual four-note melodies but rather as classlike structural melodies abstracted from hundreds of phrases. Viewed in this way, the particulars of each pattern take on significance. For instance, example 4-1c above—the 3-—2...4—3 pattern—is distinguished by a tonic pedal and the parallel motion of imperfect consonances. Generations of composers have preserved these central features of the schema. Even in Shostakovich the “network of interrelations”’ remains largely intact (example 4-6).

EXAMPLE 4-6. An example of a 3—2...4—3 schema in Shostakovich, 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 87' (1951), Prelude 7, meas. 19

Besides having individual structural characteristics, the various changing-note schemata react quite differently to standard musical transformations. For example, the 1—7...4—3 schema is frequently heard with the 4—3 melodic dyad lower than the 1—7 dyad and thus without an S-like melodic contour (example 4-7). On the other hand, a corresponding version of a simple 1—7...2—1 schema (example 4-8) would be rare. When the 1—7...2—1 or 3—2...4—3 structural melodies are inverted, the closely related 1—2...7—1 or 3—4...2—3 patterns result. But an inversion of the !-—7...4—3 pattern would not produce any recognized structural melody (e.g., 1—2...5-6?).

Defining the Changing-Note Archetype

59

EXAMPLE 4-7. The 4—7 dyad placed below the 1—7 dyad

EXAMPLE 4-8. The 2—1 dyad placed below the |—7 dyad

These distinctions, coupled with the similarities already mentioned, suggest that the changing-note archetype is really a complex network of associated schemata. In this network the schemata bear a family resemblance to each other based on their sharing of features, even though no single set of features defines each and every member of the family. The structure of this associative network may be comparable to those structures psychologists have formulated for other complex mental concepts. So in the next section we examine how associative networks are presumed to be organized, in order to better conceptualize how several unique schemata might together form a larger construct—Meyer’s changing-note archetype. ASSOCIATIVE NETWORKS Endel Tulving proposed two basic kinds of memory: episodic memory, roughly equivalent to memory of events, and semantic memory.” Jean Mandler makes a similar distinction between schematic and categorical memory.° By the terms semantic or categorical memory these authors mean our internal organization of concepts. (In music, concepts might include, among other things, abstract style forms such as

S-like contour or binary form.)

The prevailing representation of this organization is not in terms of schemata but rather in terms of memory nodes and a network of simple interconnections. Figure 4-1 1s an example of a network associated with the concepts bird, animal, fish, and so on.’ The length of each arrow in this network is significant; for example, people associate canary more closely than ostrich with the concept bird. The direction of each arrow only clarifies a relationship (e.g.,

“[a] bird [has] wings,”’

not

60

~=Theoretical Foundation

‘“‘wings [have] bird’’) and does not imply that associations move in any particular direction; the strings of association “‘(a) bat (can) fly (as can a) bird (like a) canary”

and ‘‘(a) bat (is a) mammal (as is a) cow”’ are equally valid. One can easily imagine a comparable string of music-theoretic associations connected with various changingnote schemata.

For example,

has a) binary form.”

“(a) 1—7...2—1

schema (has an) S-like contour (and

BREATHES

LIVES

IN Cc AN

HAS

s ISA

ISA

DANGEROUS

IS

nD

[A

MODERN

BUILDING

CONTAINING OFFICE AND

LIVING

SPACE,

SPACE

LIGHT

FOR

COMPLEX SPACE, INDUSTRY,

SHOPPING

ENTERTAINMENT.}

FiGuRE 4-1. The association of concepts by a network of memory nodes (From Janet L. Lachman and Roy Lachman, “Theories of Memory

Organization and Human Evolution,” in Memory Organization and Structure,

ed. C. Richard Puff [Orlando, Fla.: Academic Press, 1979], p. 163. Copyright © 1979. Reprinted by permission of Academic Press and the authors.)

AND

Defining the Changing-Note Archetype

61

Unlike a network of associations, a schema of related events—an event schema—has determinable beginning and ending points. These two types of memory organization commingle if we allow the term feature for event schemata to coincide with the term concept for semantic networks. Bird, for example, can be both a concept linked to the memory nodes wings, canary, animal, and so on, and a feature in the schemata bird-eating-a-worm, flying, or nest-building. Similarly in music, dominant seventh chord, for example, can be both a concept linked to the memory nodes instability, dissonance, and so on, and a feature in the schemata perfect authentic cadence and 1-—7...4—3 changing-note. Figure 4-2 suggests an abstract representation of how two memory nodes—i.e., concepts—might participate as features in four schemata,* thus creating an associative network of schemata.

\

(Schema A)

L

>


]

J

(Node II)

is >>

(Schema D)

]

FIGURE 4-2. The association of schemata by memory nodes. (Adapted from Joseph P. Becker, “A Model for the Encoding of Experiential Information,”

in Computer Models of Thought and Language, ed. Roger C. Schank and Kenneth (Mark Colby [New York: W. H. Freeman, 1973], p. 410. Copyright © 1973 by W. H. Freeman and Co. Used by permission.)

In this hypothetical case, schema A relates two states or events, the sign “>>” between them showing that one precedes the other. Each event has two features—the dots connected to arrows—and each feature is connected to some memory node. Schema A 1s related to schema C because a feature in the terminal event of schema A is connected to the same memory node (node /) as 1s a feature in the initial event of schema C. In a similar fashion, every schema in figure 4-2 is related to every other schema, even though a simple definition of these relationships may be difficult to put into words. If the abstract schemata of figure 4-2 are replaced by specific types of changing-note schemata, and the abstract memory nodes are replaced by specific

62

Theoretical Foundation

musical style forms, then a rough image begins to take shape of part of the network of associated schemata that defines Meyer’s changing-note archetype (figure 4-3). The concept of rival schemata, that is, of event schemata that share initial events but later diverge, can obviously relate event sequences only on the restricted basis of initial events or cues. The complementary concept of memory nodes can associate features or events irrespective of their order in a schema. It is this latter type of memory organization that allows us at least to suggest explanations for some forms of analogy 1n music.

‘\

se equ

t

NN

:. has 4-3 dyad

\

has S-like contour i

Eg,

me GE]

|

I-—vii®

NYE [CS i

gg.

I

Vo_]

has binary

! /

/

f |

1-116

Gat)

V7-I

has V-I ending

en

form



Tin,

FiGure 4-3. An associative network of changing-note schemata A musical example from Mozart’s early Symphony in G Major, KV 124 (example 4-9), may clarify what relevance memory nodes have for analysis. This 1~7...4—3 schema is quite simple and not far removed from the hypothetical example 4-1le. In the recapitulation of this Andante, example 4-9 is modified to suggest the 3-—2...4—3 pattern in example 4-10, now in the tonic. As before, with the ex-

amples from Haydn and Massonneau (see examples 2-23 and 2-24), these Mozart examples challenge our ability to precisely define thematic identity in eighteenthcentury music. Schema theory, as outlined in chapter 1, can accommodate the divergence from a norm as seen in Haydn and Massonneau. But the two Mozart examples would, in isolation, derive from slightly different schemata.

Defining the Changing-Note Archetype

63

Examples 4-9 and 4-10 seem to lend support to Meyer’s concept of the changingnote archetype. In effect, Mozart made an implicit equation of two related schemata, both within the scope of Meyer’s archetype. Some aspects in which the schemata are similar pertain to time-independent style forms, particularly the S-like melodic contour. Other aspects—the similar endings of each example, for instance—are perceived retrospectively. The relationship between the phrases, then, is not one of rival schemata but more one of closely related nodes in an associative network. The two structures are not synonymous but analogous.

I

4

V3

v7

1

EXAMPLE 4-9. Mozart, Symphony in G Major, KV

meas.

THE

124 (1772), 11, Andante,

11-12

1-7...4—3

I

V

v7)|

EXAMPLE 4-10. Mozart, Symphony in G Major, KV

124 (1772), 11, Andante,

meas. 43-44

SCHEMA

This study will concentrate on the schema represented by example 4-le: 1-—7...4-3. This schema’s melodic pattern is unique among changing-note patterns in having different beginning and ending pitches. But another reason for selecting this schema becomes important for the second, historical, portion of this study. A simple melodic style form such as 1—7—2-—1 can be found in a wide variety of historical styles. Indeed, the pattern is so basic to Western music as to be almost stylistically neutral. But this is not the case with the melodic style form

1—7—4—3;

this style

form is peculiar to the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. That is, placing this style form in the context of a single style structure further narrows its historical range and creates a clearly defined time frame within which to study one type of musical structure. The aim of this section is to provide a basic definition of the 1—7...4-3 schema. My definition entails the same features mentioned by Meyer but views them as features in an event schema. I have adopted Joseph P. Becker’s notational conventions (seen above in figures 4-2 and 4-3).’ These are: (1) square brackets,

enclose the schema; (2) canted brackets, (

[

], to

), to enclose each event; (3) the sign

64

Theoretical Foundation

‘=> to indicate the order of events; and (4) various special signs representing features. These special signs are the roman numerals referring to harmonic categories, circled numbers referring to scale degrees in the melody and bass, and broken vertical lines referring to metric boundaries (i.e., a bar line or some fraction of a mea-

sure). The result is shown in figure 4-4.



Initial event

Terminal event

3

3

3

Melody

3

ia

eto

>

~

o

a

= =

[

5 ' +* V

2

S —

>

Harmony V

3

3S ' +

]

t

3

3

3

OG

Bass

3G)

o

~~

Harmony

-

“wy

On,r@

Z

Bass

Ox,

Or ?

C1)

_ FIGURE 4-4.

The

1—7...4—3 schema

The exact placement of the metric boundary in the first event is usually repeated in the second event. Across these boundaries occur coordinated sets of movements. For example, across the first metric boundary there is movement from the

melodic scale degree © to degree ©, movement in the bass from ©® to @ (or occasionally 3 —

2 or 1 — 5), and harmonic movement to the dominant, usually but not

always from the tonic. /t is such a coordinated set of movements and not the presence or absence of any single feature that characterizes each schema event. Furthermore, the initial and terminal schema events need not be adjacent; they may be separated by other music. This separation, however, rarely if ever exceeds the time limit of short-term memory—perhaps about six seconds in the complex contexts of eighteenth-century music. The schema outlined in figure 4-4 is applicable to a wide range of musical phrases. One of the simplest examples is from Mozart’s Symphony in A Major, KV 114 (example 4-11). (In this and subsequent examples the square brackets delimiting the schema and the arrow sign connecting the schema events are omitted whenever

Defining the Changing-Note Archetype

65

these indications would be superfluous.) A slightly more complex example from Mozart’s

G-Major

Keyboard

Sonata,

KV

283

(189h)

(example

4-12) has already

been analyzed to show its network of melodic relationships (see chapter 2 and example 2-11).

!



!

I—-v

4 3

V an

;

| |

|

| , 4

4

Or@

O7

EXAMPLE 4-11. Mozart, Symphony in A Major, KV 114 (1771), ili, Trio, meas. 9-12

0-0

QO

EXAMPLE 4-12. Mozart, Keyboard Sonata in G Major, KV 1775), 1, Allegro, meas. 1-4

283 (189h) (early

While the melodic dyads 1—7 and 4-3 are important features, they are easily obscured by other melodic patterns. One way in which these dyads can be given added prominence is through dissonance. In example 4-13, from Mozart’s C-Minor Keyboard Sonata, KV 457, notice how the initial notes of each dyad are held across

the metric boundaries to create suspensions. Still further melodic variation is possible and indeed common, at times departing from the simple norm of figure 4-4. If,

66

Theoretical Foundation

for example, Mozart had used unprepared appoggiaturas in place (see example 4-14), the melodic dyads would no longer straddle the ries. Would example 4-14 then be based on a different schema? No, represent another possible realization of the underlying 1—7...4—3 ization with less typical melodic features.

0-9 EXAMPLE 4-13. Mozart, Keyboard Molto allegro, meas. 1-4

Sonata

of suspensions metric boundait would merely schema, a real-

OO in C Minor,

o-0

KV

457

(1784),

iii,

@—pO

EXAMPLE 4-14. A hypothetical version of example 4-13

It is important to bear in mind that a schema is an abstracted norm and not a fixed definition; in other words, it is an inherently psychological phenomenon. To reinforce this point it may be prudent first to briefly review Rumelhart’s six characteristics of a schema with reference to the 1—7...4—3 structure and then to present a final example in which Mozart cleverly exploits important aspects of schematic perception. Rumelhart’s first point is that “schemata have variables.”’ A few melodic variations of the 1—7...4—3 schema have already been presented, and the next chapter takes variations of this and other features as its central topic. Rumelhart’s second point is that “‘schemata can embed, one within another.”’ As we shall see, low-level melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic schemata can be embedded within the 1—7...4—3

schema, which itself can be embedded within larger schemata that organize extended phrases or periods. His third and fourth points, “schemata represent knowledge at all levels of abstraction” and ‘“‘schemata represent knowledge rather than

Defining the Changing-Note Archetype

67

definitions,’ speak to the differences between a simple definitional list of attributes and more sophisticated, holistic forms of human cognition. While at a low level of structure a schema might be approximated by an if-then type of definition (e.g., If conditions x, y, and z are met, then the phenomenon in question is a passing tone), at higher levels a schema is better conceived as a unique gestalt. How the mind might use this type of gestalt is suggested by Rumelhart’s last two points— ‘schemata are active processes” and “‘schemata are recognition devices.’’ By “‘active process” he means, for instance, that when we hear the initial event of a 1—7...4-—3 schema we

form an expectation of probable terminal events and actively listen for them. By ‘recognition device” he means that we first evaluate a phenomenon in terms of the schemata we know and then interpret the phenomenon according to the schema that fits it best. In doing this we weigh evidence for and against various schemata and make a choice based on an overall pattern of features. Since this evaluation takes place as music unfolds, our prospective estimation of an event’s significance can in retrospect change as new evidence presents itself. One might, for example, perceive what sounds like a small half-cadence, only to reinterpret it a moment later as the initial event in a 1—7...4—3 schema because the later interpretation better accounts for the overall pattern of features. A phrase that well exemplifies this fluid view of a schema can be found in the first movement

of Mozart’s Keyboard

Sonata in Bb Major,

KV

333 (315c), where

the theme modulates from the tonic to the dominant (example 4-15). In initiating the move toward the dominant, the first event is somewhat ambiguous; the 1—7 melody,

the move to the dominant, and the ascending step in the bass are all present, but the event lacks a tonic F harmony and uses the less typical unprepared appoggiatura form of melodic dyad. It is only with the clear and quite regular terminal event that we can reinterpret the first event more securely as the beginning of a 1—7...4—3 schema. Overall, this schema best accounts for the many features and relationships, even though the phrase begins most atypically. By a sleight of hand made possible by schema-based perception, Mozart modulates without obviously modulating and creates the unexpected while still fulfilling our expectations.

Bb:()+@ F:

@20 '

@+©

EXAMPLE 4-15. Mozart, Keyboard Sonata in BL Major, KV 333 (315c) (1778), i, (Allegro), meas. 11-14

CHAPTER

5

Schematic Norms and Variations

The preceding chapters developed concepts of musical schemata in general and the 1—7...4~3 schema in particular. It would be possible now to leave theoretical matters behind and proceed with the chronologically ordered discussion of Part II, but to do so would slight one of the most interesting, if nonetheless problematic, areas of schema research. I refer to the nature of norms, limits of variation, and the effects of

the simultaneous variation of several component features. Because these topics are difficult to address in the abstract, I will present a sizable group of musical examples with which to illustrate the discussion. Some examples are used to show the effects of changes in a single feature, say the harmony or bass line. Others demonstrate how combined changes in several features may so deform

a phrase

that we

no

longer

feel confident

in calling

it, for instance,

a

1—7...4—3 style structure.’ As will be seen, the framework that schema theory provides for dealing with the inevitable doubts and uncertainties of schematic categorization is one of its most important contributions. The idea of variation, as in a theme-and-variations movement, is familiar to all musicians. An analogy can be drawn between a theme with its variations and a schema with its various instantiations. For example, the Finale of Haydn’s Keyboard Sonata in G Major, Hob. X VI/27—a theme-and-variations movement—has a theme

(example 5-1a) that begins with a 1—7...4—3 style structure. This phrase its subsequent variations (example 5-1, b—f) are also instantiations of 4—3 schema. And just as each variation alters one or more features of each instantiation (including the theme) alters one or more norms of the Judging the psychological distance of an instantiation from the

and each of the 1-7... the theme, schema. norms of a

EXAMPLE 5-1! (facing page). Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in G Major, Hob. XVI/27 (21776), ii, Presto: (a) meas. 1-4; (b) meas. 25—28; (c) meas. 49—52; (ad) meas. 81-84; (e) meas. 105-8; (f) meas. 113-16

\®)

OO

70

Theoretical Foundation

schema can be a difficult task, especially when fine discriminations are required. For instance, while it might be taken for granted that examples 5-2 and 5-3 (phrases from other Haydn finales) are instantiations comparable to the phrases of example 5-1, it would not be easy to say which is closer to the norms of the schema. Still

more difficult would be an attempt to rank all eight of the aforementioned phrases by

their proximity to the schema.

@—+@

61-0

EXAMPLE 5-2. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in D Major, Hob. XVI/37 (— 1780), iii, Presto ma non troppo, meas. 1-4

EXAMPLE 5-3. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in F Major, Hob. XVI/23 (1773), 11, Presto, meas. 1-4

In light of these difficulties a systematic analysis of schema variation would be premature. But an orderly discussion is nevertheless possible. This discussion will proceed by hierarchical levels, beginning with the variation of individual features, moving to the variation of the two schema events, and concluding with the variation of the schema as a whole. At each level we will see that even if fine distinctions prove elusive, gross distinctions can be made that still illuminate important aspects of musical style.

Schematic Norms

and Variations

71

VARIATION OF INDIVIDUAL FEATURES

Bass Line The most common bass line used with the 1—7...4—3 schema is 1—2...7—1, that is,

tonic to supertonic and then leading tone to tonic. Almost all the examples thus far presented use this pattern in the bass. Still, even within the restricted context of the typical I-V—V-I harmony other basses are possible. The three phrases by Haydn in example 5-4 have 1-5...5—1 basses. The 1-5...5—1 bass can be further simplified by omitting or attenuating its first and third pitches, that is, (1)—5...(5)—1 (example 5-5). Hybrid crosses of the 1-2...7—1 and 1—5...5—1 basses will also be seen from time to time in this study. Of the two possibilities, the 1-2...5—1 bass is more common than the 1—5...7—1 bass owing perhaps to a preference for movement toward, rather than away from, the root-position dominant. (a)

!

38

(b)

O--@ 39

;

o--@ 41

40

I—@

O-—9

(c)

O-@

7) —_—__—— +¢ |

O+@

6)

( |

EXAMPLE 5-4. (a) Haydn(?),? Keyboard Sonata in A Major, Hob. XVI/5 (— 1763), 1, Allegro, meas. 38-41; (b) Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in By Major, Hob. XVI/41 (— 1784), i, Allegro, meas. 8—11; (c) Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in E} Major, Hob. XVI/49 (1789-90), 1, Allegro, meas. 81-84

72

Theoretical Foundation

(a) 138

O-—@, 139

|

@&

@5-@

~~

;

@

EXAMPLE 5-5. (a) Beethoven, Piano Sonata in D Major, “Pastoral,” Op. 28

(1801), 1, Allegro, meas. 138—40; (5) Haydn, Keyboard Sonata No. 18 in

E,

Major in Wiener Urtext Ed. (?c1764), 1, Allegro, meas.

23-24

Schematic Norms and Variations

73

All the basses so far discussed begin with or imply a beginning on a rootposition triad. An alternative to such a tonally secure beginning is provided by a 3—2...7—1 bass. In examples 5-6a and 5-6b, Haydn uses this bass to modulate from tonic major to relative minor.

Ab: —— >f:

(b)

i

1

0—

F: —— > d:

6

O+@

EXAMPLE 5-6. Haydn: (a) Keyboard Sonata in A}

_

'@—¢

O+0 Major, Hob. XVI/46 (c1767—

70), 1, Allegro moderato, meas. 9-10; (b) Keyboard Sonata in F Major, Hob. XVI/23 (1773), 1, (Moderato), meas. 12-15

Many of these basses could theoretically be used in other related schemata. There would be no part-writing rules violated were the 3—2...7—1 bass used, for example, with a 1—7...2—1 melody. But there is an important distinction to be made between theoretical combinations of eighteenth-century style forms and the actual conventions of eighteenth-century style structures.

74

Theoretical Foundation

When Haydn rewrites example 5-6b as a 1—7...2—1 style structure later in the same movement, he provides the 1—2...2—3 bass belonging to the conventions of that style structure (example 5-7). The same distinction is observed in the two phrases

from a Haydn Adagio in example 5-8.

>

*.*

O——@

«/, 62

.

.

63

e

e

*

9

!

N—>@| EXAMPLE 5-7. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in F Major, Hob. (Moderato), meas. 61—64

XVI/23

(1773), i,

(b)

Eb:

EXAMPLE 5-8. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in E} Major, Hob. XVI/38 (—1780), ii, Adagio: (a) meas. 1—2; (b) meas. 5-6

Schematic Norms

and Variations

75

Without this distinction, 1—7...4-—3 and 1-7...2—1 schemata would differ only in their terminal melodic dyads. With this distinction, composers were able to provide early clues as to which schema was being used. For example, when @ remains in the bass in measure 23 of example 5-9, a 1—7...2—1 style structure can be predicted, even though confirmation must wait until measure 26. It is interesting to speculate that the 1-5...5-1 bass may be less common for the 1—7...4—3 schema because it does not help to differentiate this schema from 1—7...2—1 style structures (see also example 7-15 and the accompanying discussion).

O—>@

Q EXAMPLE 5-9. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in F Major, Op. i, Allegro, meas. 19—26

! 10, No. 2 (1796-97),

Harmony Variations in the bass lines of 1—7...4—3 style structures concomitantly produce slight variations in harmony; root-position triads are replaced by inverted triads, and vice versa. More extensive harmonic variation is also possible. For example, instead of forming a stable area of tonic harmony at the beginning of a 1—7...4—3 style structure, the harmony can progress toward the dominant chord that closes the first event. This permits modulations (see, for instance, example 4-15) and allows more

complex harmonic design. A simple example of a harmonic progression to the domi-

76

~=Theoretical Foundation

nant chord has already been presented in example 5-3 (i.e., I-IV—If—V). The limits of this type of variation are difficult to fix. For instance, the Scherzo of Schumann’s Piano Sonata Op. 11 (example 5-10) opens in F# minor, but the tenuous 1—7...4—3 style structure embedded in the first phrase is in A major!

| EXAMPLE 5-10. Schumann, 1-8

Piano Sonata, Op.

COO 11 (1832-35), Scherzo, meas.

Within the more traditional confines of the 1—7...4—3 schema, one of the standard harmonic variations involves a deceptive cadence at the close of the second event. Frequently this variation occurs in conjunction with a melodic complex that links the two melodic dyads with a linear melodic descent. Example 5-11 presents a simple version of this melodic complex. The phrase from Schumann’s “‘Wehmut”’ analyzed in chapter 2 is also of this type. In Beethoven’s Piano Sonata Op. 111 this same 1—7...4—3 complex is presented first with a tonic cadence (albeit over a dominant pedal) and then with a deceptive cadence (example 5-12).

0-9

0-©

EXAMPLE 5-11. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in D Major, Hob. XVI/4 (?c1765), i, Menuet, meas. |—4

Schematic Norms and Variations

20

'O—->

77

| 9>O

vii? | vi

vi

EXAMPLE 5-12. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in C Minor, Op. 111 (1821-22), i, Allegro con brio ed appassionato, meas. 50—54

When the bass line of a 1—7...4—3 style structure first moves up from ® to @

and then descends to the dominant, it sometimes happens that the tonic chord 1s prematurely touched upon. This does not negate the schema as long as the tonic chord is brief and clearly in passing, as in example 5-13.

O+®

:

I

EXAMPLE 5-13. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in E, Major, Op. 31, No. 3 (1802), iii, Minuetto, Moderato e grazioso, meas. 1-4

78

Theoretical Foundation

Melodic Dyads The possible extent of variation in the harmony or bass line of a 1—7...4-3 style structure depends to a degree on the compensating clarity of the melody. Similarly, against a simple background even florid melodic variations can be accommodated. Example 5-12 has already presented a 1—7...4—3 style structure with a melodically ornamented restatement. Example 5-14 presents a similar pair of phrases. Notice how the 4—3 dyad is obscured by the intervening D#. The 1—7 dyad is less often thus obscured, perhaps because without a clear initial event the schema itself might be obscured. Three more examples of ornamented 4—3 dyads, all taken from Haydn keyboard sonatas, are given in example 5-15. (a)

ee

NL

© EXAMPLE 5-14. Mozart, Keyboard Sonata in C Major, KV 309 (284b) (1777), 11, Andante con poco adagio: (a) meas. 33-36; (b) meas. 53-56

EXAMPLE 5-15 (facing page). Haydn: (a) Keyboard Sonata in B, Major, Hob. XVI/2 (—71760), 11, Largo, meas. 1-4; (b) Keyboard Sonata in D Major, Hob. XV1I/24 (71773), 11, Adagio, meas. 9-12; (c) Keyboard Sonata in G Major, Hob. XVI/39 (— 1780), 11, Adagio, meas. 8-11

Schematic Norms and Variations (a)

(l~s7)

;

;

O-~@ j

(b)

79

80

Theoretical Foundation

In several of the examples thus far presented, the © and @ of the 1—7 and 4-3 dyads have only a fleeting presence. Often the sense of these pitches is reinforced by their earlier, more prominent appearances, as in example 5-16. But the question arises as to whether these pitches can be forfeited to default values:* that is, can the melodic pattern be reduced to —~ 7 ... — 3, much as the 1—5...5—1 bass can be reduced to— 5 ... — 1? For instance, in the two statements of the phrase in example 5-17, is the first phrase a 1—7...4—3 style structure even though it lacks a melodic

@? And is the phrase in example 5-18 also a 1—7...4—3 style structure?

EXAMPLE 5-16. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in C Major, Hob. XVI/35 (— 1780), ii, Adagio, meas. 1-2

040 EXAMPLE 5-17. Mozart, Keyboard Sonata in F Major, KV A135 (547a) (71788), 1, Allegro, meas. 17-24

Schematic Norms

@)-

and Variations

8]

'G)

9:0; EXAMPLE 5-18. A. E. Miiller?, once attributed to Mozart as KV’ 498a (1786), Keyboard Sonata in B} Major, iv, Allegro, meas. 110-13

From a historical perspective, these phrases were written just after the heyday of the 1—7...4—3 schema and were heard and performed by people conditioned to expect such a schema in this type of thematic role. And from a psychological perspective, these phrases have very clear 1—7 dyads and standard 1—2...7—1 bass lines, so that an expectation of a 1—7...4—3 style structure may well be formed and default values for the 4—3 dyad generated. It is still a real question, however, whether these default values are strong enough to supply a pitch that is not there. Default values may help us to interpret ornate or obscured 4—3 dyads, yet examples 5-17 and 5-18 have clearly defined patterns in lieu of the 4—3 dyads (a descending triad in the first phrase of example 5-17, a chromatic ascent in example 5-18). With this in mind, my policy for this study is to exclude from consideration those phrases that lack either of the two crucial melodic dyads. I hope that this admittedly arbitrary restriction will eventually be proven to have been unnecessarily conservative. Though the presence of 1—7 and 4—3 dyads will be considered a necessary condition for a 1—7...4—3 schema, it is in no way a sufficient condition. In Narmour’s terms, the 1—7...4—3 style structure involves more than just the presence of a 1—7...4—3 melodic style form. Not only must other features in the structural complex be present, but there must also be enough rhythmic-harmonic-melodic closure to establish the two schema events as perceptible points of articulation.

82

Theoretical Foundation

o>

@

ORO

16 —>V4

EXAMPLE 5-19. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in C# Minor, “Moonlight,” Op. 27, No. 2 (1801), ii, Allegretto, meas. 1-8

(i) ___~_>6) EXAMPLE

5-20.

{

6!

©

Schubert, Symphony

No. 5 in Bh

IV +91

©

Major, D485

(1816), i, Alle-

gro, meas. 5-12

‘ ( I

EXAMPLE 5-21.

meas.

Haydn,

|—4

!

i t

Overture in D Major, Hob.

Ia:4 (?1782-84),

1, Presto,

Schematic Norms

and Variations

83

In example 5-19 the phrase by Beethoven has 1-7 and 4—3 dyads, harmonic movement to the dominant and then to the tonic, a clear bipartite form, and other

features of the 1—7...4—3 schema. But the two schema events are deformed by a lack of harmonic and melodic closure. None of the deforming features of example 5-19 by itself would prevent a phrase from being perceived as a 1—7...4—3 style structure. For instance, the harmonically open tonic six-four chord under the melodic ® in example 5-19 has already been seen in example 5-12. Likewise, the less

closed IV°—I§ progression at this same point in example 5-19 can be found in a

1—7...4—3 style structure by Schubert (example 5-20). By placing the 1—7 and 4—3 melodic dyads at the beginning of phrase halves in example 5-19, Beethoven made them harder to perceive. But again, as is seen in example 5-21, this feature alone does not prevent these dyads from being perceived. And finally, the downward melodic continuation of the 1—7 and 4—3 dyads in example 5-19 lessens the closure of the dyads but need not deform them beyond recognition. The problem with example 5-19 is that a number of deforming features converge in a single phrase. The normative structures are not strong enough to compensate for the several variations. Rather than say that example 5-19 is or is not a 1-—7...4—3 style structure, | would call it an idiostructure with affinities to the 1—7...4—3 schema. Though anathema to highly systematized analytic methods, this type of description need not be excluded from psychologically based analyses. Perhaps a simpler example may demonstrate why ‘“‘fuzzy’’ categorizations need to be recognized in music theory. Example 5-22, up to the vertical line of dashes, is a fine case of a small 1—7...4—3 style structure. The 1-7 dyad is slightly deformed by the ensuing melodic descent (a’'—g#’—f#’—e’), but this is compensated by the normative bass, the repeat of the a’, and the appoggiatura a’—g#’. The 4—3 dyad occurs precisely where expected and is also accompanied by the normative bass—7—1. Yet the phrase continues beyond the closing bracket to a half cadence on the dominant. The melodic descent past the 4-3 dyad (e”—d"—c"—b’), the failure to echo the appoggiatura heard earlier on 1-7, and the suggestion of the very different I-V—I-—V

harmonic progression, all deform the 1—7...4—3

schema.

The evidence

for the 1—7...4—3 schema that accumulates before the line of dashes is retrospectively called into question. A doctrinaire assertion that this phrase is or is not a 1—7...4—3 style structure would be entirely out of place and would slight the important interplay of positive and negative evidence. The concept of a deformed style structure provides a useful alternative to the contention that a musical structure must either be, or not be, a member of a particular structural category.

EXAMPLE 5-22. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata inC# Minor, Hob. X VI/36 (?c1770— 75), 11, Allegro con brio, meas. 17—18

84

Theoretical Foundation

As a last example of variations that affect the melodic dyads of 1—7...4—3 style structures, I present two phrases that have the relative positions of melody and accompaniment

inverted.

In the first phrase,

by Beethoven,

only the inversion of

melody and accompaniment distinguishes this structure from standard 1—7...4—3

style structures (see example 5-23). In the following phrase by Schumann, however,

a number of variations converge to place this structure either beyond the 1—7...4—3

schema or at its very fringe (example 5-24); much would depend on how the per-

former interpreted the accents indicated for the left hand. |

J

2

simile

3

,

'

wI---

tf Sopra

4

f

!

tyU---

EXAMPLE 5-23. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in D Major, Op. 10, No. 3 (1797-98), 1, Trio, Allegro, meas. 1-8

O—_ EXAMPLE meas.

5-24. Schumann, I-8

Faschingsschwank

aus Wien,

No.

| (1839-40),

Schematic Norms

and Variations

85

VARIATION OF THE Two SCHEMA EVENTS There are different ways of viewing schema events. From the top down—that is, from the point of view of the schema as a whole—the two events are high-level features. From the bottom up—that is, from the point of view of individual features— the two events are low-level schemata. Some aspects of variation of the two schema events might thus be described by the same terms used to describe features and schemata. But, to the extent that schema events are different from the schema as a whole

or from individual features, a discussion of their variation might require a new and different terminology. Such a discussion would, first of all, require a way of accurately describing the perception of a schema event. Ideally, one could specify such event qualities as clarity, distinctness, vividness, or prominence. Unfortunately, no satisfactory method for doing this as yet exists. Looking back over the many 1|—7...4—3 style structures shown in this chapter, one sees that some undeniably have more prominent, clearly perceptible schema events than others. But merely recognizing that such distinctions exist is not the same as knowing how to discuss them. Although some central characteristics of schema events and their possible variation must, for the present, remain unspecified, a few peripheral features can be addressed. One of these is metric placement. Whereas all the examples shown thus far have their metric boundaries immediately prior to downbeats, a few other examples shift these boundaries over to just before weak beats. In example 5-25, from one of the late Haydn keyboard sonatas, the schema events close on very weak parts of the meter and are further weakened by the upbeat leaps in the melody that tend to dis-

associate © from @ and @ from @. Nearly the same metric placement is used in the slow movement of Beethoven’s * Waldstein’’ Sonata (example 5-26). In a very few

EXAMPLE 5-25. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in E} Major, Hob. XVI1/49 (178990), 1, Allegro, meas. 13—14

EXAMPLE 5-26. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in C Major, “Waldstein,” Op. 53 (1803-04), ili, Adagio molto, meas.

14

86

Theoretical Foundation

cases the first metric boundary precedes a downbeat and the second precedes a weak beat (example 5-27). This pattern is usually found in minuets and may suggest a type of hemiola.

@-@

:

EXAMPLE 5-27. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in G Major, Hob. XVI/27 (71776), ii, Menuet,

meas.

1—2

In any 1-—7...4—3 style structure, the two schema events account for only two moments. All the other music that precedes, intervenes between, or follows the two moments can effect how the schema events are perceived. For example, if a small phrase is expanded by prefacing each schema event with important melodic material, the schema events may seem to recede into the background. This effect can be demonstrated with three phrases, each of which may be considered, for purposes of illustration, an expansion of the previous one. The first phrase, introduced in the previous chapter, has a melody limited to the two melodic dyads (example 5-28). The second phrase, analyzed in chapter 2, places implied melodic triads before each schema dyad (example 5-29). The third phrase condenses the content of example 5-29 and then precedes it with more triadic figurations (example 5-30), resulting in a greatly expanded type of |—7...4—3 style structure in which the two schema events make up but a small fraction of the entire phrase. The two schema dyads that were perceived as the melody in example 5-28 appeared as part melody, part cadence in example 5-29 and may seem mostly cadential in example 5-30, though they remain more than just perfunctory marks of punctuation.

@———>®

@

EXAMPLE 5-28. Mozart, Symphony in A Major, KV 114 (1771), ui, Trio, meas. 9-12

Schematic Norms

P

87

—+Q)

EXAMPLE 5-29. Mozart, Keyboard Sonata in G Major, KV 1775), 1, Allegro, meas. 1-4

P

283 (189h) (early



+

f

and Variations

i

' { !

EXAMPLE 5-30. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in E, 1801), 1, Allegro, meas. 37—40

f Major, Op. 27, No.

!

i

1 (1800-

In the preceding two examples, conformant enlargements were made to each phrase half. One-sided enlargements are also possible, though unusual. Enlargements of only the first half of a 1—7...4—3 style structure have a tendency to subsume or subordinate the schema itself. In example 5-31, the impression is not that of a two-measure schema with extra material preceding it, but rather of a four-measure phrase with an embedded, subordinate two-measure 1—7...4—3 style structure.

EXAMPLE 5-31. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in C Major, Hob. XVI/21 (—?1765), i, Allegro, meas. 1-4

88

Theoretical Foundation

Placing extra material between the two schema events can suggest an extension or interpolation. In example 5-32, notice how the viola’s cadenzalike passage stretches the time between the two schema,events. Mozart distinguishes the extension from the schema through differences in texture: solo viola for the extension, full quartet for the schema events.

EXAMPLE 5-32. Mozart, String Quartet in G Major, KV 387 (1782), 1, Allegro vivace aSsal, meas. 68—72

In examples 5-25 through 5-32, [ have tried to illustrate some of the variations that occur in positioning the two schema events in relation to the prevailing meter. Variations also occur in positioning the two schema events in relation to conformant subphrases.* The norm is for the two schema events to be appended to the ends of conformant subphrases, as in figure 5-1. Most of the examples in this study are of this type. Less common is for the schema events to begin or to be in the middle of conformant subphrases, as in figures 5-2 and 5-3. A musical example of figure 5-2 has already been given in example 5-21, and one of figure 5-3 in example 5-23. “ Schema

events

°

e

° ° o ° ° °

e

e

e e e e

“*+,Conformant subphrases -’ FIGURE 5-1. Schema events following conformant subphrases

° ° e

@

o ° e ° ° °

%e

e

Schematic Norms

|

\ LLL

| FIGURE 5-2.

and Variations

89

|

| Schema events preceding conformant subphrases

\

Ji\

, WLLL 17 \I/ FIGURE 5-3. Schema events within conformant subphrases

In the three types of phrases just presented, each schema event is part of only one subphrase. A slightly different phrase type has a schema event connecting two conformant subphrases, as in figure 5-4. The phrase type of figure 5-4 may be considered an elision or enjambment of the phrase type in figure 5-1. The following phrase by Beethoven (example 5-33a) demonstrates how closely related the two phrase types are. Removing the first measure of Beethoven’s phrase (see example 5-33b) or inserting a new fourth measure (example 5-33c) would transform this phrase into an ordinary 1—7...4—3 style structure. To indicate the differences between_this new phrase type and standard 1—7...4—3 style structures, I label it the x 1-7...4-3 style structure, using brackets to symbolize the conformant subphrases. In both the 1-7...4-3 and x1-7...4-3 style structures we have seen that there is almost always a strong melodic connection across each dyad (1 > 7, 4— 3) and often little direct connection between the scale degrees © and @. This situation, normative by virtue of the Gestalt principle of the association of proximate

90

Theoretical Foundation

\

lla

J

FiGureE 5-4. Schema events linking conformant subphrases

(c)

O+9

O49

re EXAMPLE

5-33.

(a) Beethoven,

Piano Sonata in D Minor,

‘‘Tempest,’’ Op.

31,

No. 2 (1802), ii, Adagio, meas. 1—5; (b) and (c) are altered versions of (a)

Schematic Norms and Variations

91

stimuli, can nevertheless be reversed or at least made ambiguous by a variety of means. For example, in a passage from Haydn’s last keyboard sonata, the temporal proximity of @ and @ overrides (or at least counterbalances—much depends on

performance) the spatial (i.e., pitch) proximity of © and ®@, @ and @ (example 5-34). The melodic connection of © and @ in example 5-34 is reinforced by the subsequent conformant leap from @ to ©.

EXAMPLE 5-34. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in Eh Major, Hob. XVI/52 (1794), 11, Adagio, meas.

3

Were the 1—7...4—3 schema nothing more than a particular melodic-harmonic succession of pitches, example 5-34 would be such a structure par excellence. But the 1—7...4—3 schema is defined by many more attributes than pitch alone; meter, rhythm, melodic conformance, preceding and succeeding contexts, rests, and articulations must all be considered. In view of these additional considerations, I believe that, while example 5-34 has the nominal pitch structure of a 1—7...4—3 schema, it is deformed into what I label a 1...7—4...3 style structure (the dash between the 7 and 4 referring to the direct melodic connection between these scale degrees). A

clearer, more typical case of the 1...7—4...3 style structure appears in the Beethoven excerpt shown in example 5-35.

® EXAMPLE 5-35. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in E} Major, (1809-10), 111, Vivacissimamente, meas. 53-55

“‘Lebewohl,” Op. 81a

92

Theoretical Foundation

Note how the 7—4 interval forms one unit (with a single bass and harmony) while the 1—3 interval forms another unit. Unlike the conformant subphrases of the typical 1—7...4—3 style structure,.1...7—4...3 style structures like example 5-35 often have complementary or antithetical sections. In example 5-35 this is manifested simply as the 3—1 descent versus the 7—4 ascent. In other examples, not only is melodic direction reversed, but contrasting figurations set apart the 7—4 interval (examples 5-36 and 5-37).

® 84

© EXAMPLE

OO

0

Q

5-36. Haydn, Keyboard Sonata in Es

Major, Hob. XVI/49

(1789-

90), 1, Allegro, meas. 84—85

36

@

@) @—

22

@

37

@

@

EXAMPLE 5-37. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in D Major, Op. 10, No. 3 (1797-98), iv, Allegro, meas. 35-37

Schematic Norms

and Variations

93

It is not always easy to distinguish between the 1—7...4—3 and 1...7—4...3 style structures. Example 5-38, for instance, has features of both style structures. But a reasonable classification can usually be made on the basis of melodic conformance or contrast and on whether or not the 7—4 interval is a direct, or at least

directly connected, interval. Thus, I consider example 5-38 a 1...7—4...3 style structure, although were the melody only slightly changed, as in example 5-39, | would classify the phrase a 1—7...4—3 style structure. The distinctions between examples 5-38 and 5-39 may seem slight and insignificant, but this is only because such distinctions are greatly attenuated by the simple, four-note melody.” In general, composers clearly differentiated between 1—7...4—3 and 1...7—4...3 style structures. Their differentiation of these structures may be rooted in historical factors, or it may also be attributable to differences in the perception of what constitutes the relevant schema events. That is, in the absence of any psychological testing, it may be presumptuous to assume that people perceive the same schema events in a 1...7—4...3 style structure that are perceived in 1-7... 4-30rx 1-7...4-3 style structures. Because of this reservation, I have excluded 1...7—4...3 style structures from the historical portion of this study.

©

.@—@

108)

EXAMPLE 5-38. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in E Minor, Op. 90 (1814), ii, Nicht

zu geschwind und sehr vorgetragen, meas. 9-10

Singbar

EXAMPLE 5-39. An alteration of example 5-38

VARIATION OF THE SCHEMA

AS A WHOLE

Variation of the schema as a whole must be discussed in holistic terms. That is, the discussion requires concepts and terms distinct from those applied to lower-level features or events. For example, consider two 1—7...4—3 style structures alike in every

respect except that one of them cadences on a submediant rather than on a

tonic

chord. This distinction, when described in terms of chords, pertains to the lower-

level feature harmony. If it were described as ‘‘a slight departure from the norms of the schema as a whole,” however, then the reference would be to a higher level.

94

Theoretical Foundation

A terminology for discussing high-level commonness or uncommonness has been provided by cognitive psychologists.° Perhaps the most important term is typicality—a subjective measure of how typical an example is of a particular schema. Though a typicality judgment is by definition subjective, this does not mean that it is necessarily capricious or inexplicable. For instance, to most Americans robin is more typical of the visual schema bird than is ostrich or penguin (see figure 4-1); in large part this is because Americans have had demonstrably greater experience with robins and because robins share features with other well-known birds (starlings,

jays, wrens, etc.). In music, carefully reasoned typicality judgments are also frequently made. For example, in describing the first movement of a symphony a scholar might say, “Composition X is highly typical of sonata form.” Two additional terms may help to refine the concept of typicality. The first is prototype. There are many related definitions of prototype, such as an experimental model, a perfect example of a type, and the most typical example of a category. We may dismiss the definition of a prototype as an experimental model; this usage is not directly related to perception and cognition. The other two definitions overlap and are not always easy to distinguish. The perfect example is probably what judges of diving contests or dog shows seek. They rate performance or appearance against an abstracted ideal prototype. On the other hand, the most typical example is probably what casting directors seek in extras and character actors—the prototypical widow, gangster, shopkeeper, policeman, and so on. These two aspects of the term prototype can become inextricably intertwined in evaluating complex phenomena such as musical compositions. The notion of the “prototypical sonata,”’ for instance, usually involves aspects of being both most typical and a perfect example. Likewise, the identification of prototypical 1—7...4—3 style structures will be unavoidably influenced by both meanings of prototype, even though my intention is to emphasize the more empirically defensible aspect of the most typical example. One way to view the high-level mental topography of schema variation is as a target with the schema prototype at the bull’s-eye. Given this image, the question naturally arises, “‘How is the target delimited? That 1s, since each concentric circle moving away from the bull’s-eye carries a lower typicality judgment, shouldn’t a point be reached where typicality approaches zero?”’ To address this question a second, additional term needs to be introduced— confidence. Confidence, often expressed on a scale of one to ten, indicates the degree of certainty a person places on a specific example’s being an instance of a particular schema. Thus typicality and confidence are slightly different expressions of the same type of evaluation. A schema prototype, for instance, could be expected to have maximum confidence as well as the required maximum typicality. And an instance of a schema near the fringe of our target would have both low confidence and low typicality. But low confidence better implies the doubt felt by a person than does the more abstract concept of low typicality. In fact, low confidence may lead to the reinterpretation of an example in terms of an alternate schema. Thus, a point of zero typicality can rarely be reached, because diminishing confidence will prompt

Schematic Norms and Variations

95

selection of an alternate schema. In this light, our target represents what is often called a fuzzy set—a category whose boundaries merge with the boundaries of other categories. Following this line of reasoning, a complete knowledge of the limits of variation of a schema requires a knowledge of all other possible schemata. Let me provide a musicological example of this principle. Suppose that a musicologist were attempting to determine the limits of variation—that is, the minima of typicality—for the schema sonata form. If this were the only large-scale musical schema known to this researcher, then he or she might easily be led to identify many aria forms, minuets, double-reprise forms, concertos, and rondos as sonata forms of very low typicality. These forms often do have some points in common with sonata form, but that is not the issue. A rondo 1s not an atypical sonata but rather a schema in its own right. While this may seem obvious in relation to large-scale forms, similar principles are frequently overlooked in relation to smaller musical schemata. For example. the Schenkerian analyses shown

in chapter 2 (see examples

2-9 and 2-10)

represent the theme of Mozart’s G-Major Keyboard Sonata, KV 283 (189h), as a descending linear pattern of low typicality rather than as a 1—7...4—3 style structure of high typicality, because that system of analysis emphasizes quite a small set of schemata. If the theme of Mozart’s G-Major Keyboard Sonata is a 1—7...4—3 style structure with high typicality, the phrase from Schumann’s “‘Wehmut,”’ also analyzed in chapter 2, is an example of the same schema with much lower typicality. Likewise the phrase by Beethoven in example 5-40 is of low typicality. (Notice how the initial schema event is reiterated, the terminal event delayed half a measure, and the harmony diverted toward the relative minor.) Though it is an overstatement, one could say that Mozart’s phrase reveals the schema while Beethoven’s and Schumann’s phrases conceal it. These phrases span nearly seventy years, suggesting that there may also be a historical dimension to typicality. This topic is addressed in the second half of this study.

Eb:

EXAMPLE 5-40. Beethoven, Piano Sonata in EL, Major, Op. 27, No. 1801), 11, Adagio con espressione, meas. 9-12

c:

620

1 (1800-

96

Theoretical Foundation

SUMMARY The many examples of variation in-harmony, melody, bass line, and other features presented in this chapter indicate that the widest range of variation is permitted to a single feature when the other features are near their norms. For example, the melodi-

cally most elaborate style structures are often found to have the simplest, most conventional accompaniments. When many features are jointly varied, the 1—7...4—3 schema can easily be obscured. Examples were presented where each feature, by itself, was within an acceptable range of variation but where the convergence of many variations produced phrases that only vaguely resembled the 1—7...4—3 schema. Features can be described in relatively concrete terms. Schema events are more abstract and, inasmuch as they have been little studied, present problems of terminology and approach. Two factors that demonstrably affect the perception of schema events are metric placement and the disposition of conformant, complementary, or contrasting subphrases. Normally, the two events of the 1—7...4—3 schema are coincident with metric bar lines. Shifting one or both events to other parts of a measure, or even to other measures, can create qualitative changes in how the events are perceived. Likewise, departures from the normal melodic design of two conformant subphrases can alter the perception of the schema events. One such variant, the x 1-7...4—3 style structure, is more processive and open-ended than the 1—7...4—3 style

structure.

Another

variant,

the

1...7—4...3

style

structure,

so deforms

the

schema events that their perceptual integrity is put into question. Variations of features and schema events have an effect on the typicality of a phrase as a whole. At least in theory one can place all phrases that are instances of a schema on a measured scale of typicality. At the one end of the scale would be the most typical example of a schema (called the schema prototype). But at the other end of the scale, where the least typical example supposedly resides, the situation would be much less clear because as typicality diminishes, so does one’s confidence in the applicability of the chosen schema. Thus an alternative schema will probably present itself when typicality becomes very low. If, following Rumelhart,

we conceive of a schema

as knowledge

abstracted

from experience, then for each listener the knowledge of a musical schema will be somewhat different. The many examples presented in the last two chapters summarize a general knowledge of the 1—7...4—3 schema that is probably shared by listeners with a broad experience of the so-called standard repertory. But this experience is not at all what Mozart’s experience was, nor was Mozart’s experience anything like Schumann’s. To understand the knowledge of the 1—7...4—3 schema held by those who created its most beautiful realizations we must examine it as a historical phenomenon.

PART II Historical Survey

CHAPTER

6

A Schema Across Time

Complex musical schemata often seem to share similar histories. That is, they appear to have in common periods of experimentation, consolidation, maturity, decline, and obsolescence. Scholars born in the nineteenth century were prone to attribute these similar histories to a spiritual life cycle. They felt that artistic forms shared phases of birth, growth, flowering, aging, and death because all living things shared these phases. While today scholars may be less inclined to view music as a living product of nature, they still frequently employ this life-cycle model of musical structure because no more plausible model has been proposed. In this chapter a new model is sketched to explain the perceived common histories of musical schemata. I argue that the apparent rise and fall of musical schemata is due to the way in which human intelligence abstracts stable categories from what is usually a continuum of historical change. In other words, musical schemata appear to have similar histories because we who perceive them have similar minds. The historical environment in which a musical schema exists can be generalized as an infinitely complex array of events (economic events, political events, artistic events, etc.), composers’ lives, and various trends. Figure 6-1 is an abstract

representation of this environment in relation to a time line. Events

@

Trends —» Composers’ lives — —

FiGurRE 6-1.

An abstract historical environment

100

Historical Survey

Several problems arise if one tries to delimit schema. Take sonata form as an example. First, how which pieces will be called a sonata form. Second, written in some years than in others. Third, some

the place in time of a musical one defines sonata form affects there were more sonata forms compositions are textbook ex-

amples of sonata form, while others are more dubious. And fourth, sonata form was

a slightly different thing for the composers who inherited it than it was for those who developed it. These problems are, of course, not peculiar to music. They are general problems of cognition that confront us whenever an attempt is made to categorize some commonality from the manifest diversity of experience. To surmount the problems associated with the quantitative and qualitative variations among instances of a musical schema I propose two related hypotheses. The first is: The variation across time in the number of instances of a musical schema approximates a normal, bell-curved statistical distribution. This means that the ‘population’ of a musical schema rises, peaks, and then falls during the course of the schema’s history. Such a rise and fall is idealized and depicted by a special type of symmetrical curve known as a normal or Gaussian distribution (a mathematical entity that, like the number 7 or the Fibonacci series, 1s frequently encountered in the world around us). A normal distribution 1s shown in figure 6-2. The horizontal axis represents the movement of time, and the vertical axis represents the number of instances of a musical structure per unit of ttme. Combining the left-to-right movement of time and the up-then-down change in a structure’s population produces a normal distribution. Population maximum

Population minimum FiGuRE 6-2.

>

Time

Hypothetical normal distribution

One important feature of a normal distribution is its lack of specificity concerning where the very first and last instances of a musical structure are to be found. Notice, in figure 6-2, how on either side of the population peak the curve approaches but never quite reaches the absolute population minimum—zero. This means that although the probability of increasingly early or late instances of a structure steadily decreases, the possibility of such additional instances never completely disappears. Even though this concept has its basis in statistics, it is consistent with the practice of musicologists who, for example, would be loath to label any single composition as “‘the world’s first sonata.” The normal distribution curve shown in figure 6-2 is but one possibility chosen

A Schema Across Time

101

from a large set of such curves. From a theoretical point of view there is only one normal distribution, with a single mathematical formula. But in practice the choice of scalings for the horizontal and vertical axes affects the contour of the curve. A distinguishing feature among these curves is the degree of pointedness in the population peak: some curves have gently sloping sides with a rounded peak, while others have steep sides with a peak resembling the point of a spike. A correlation between the general shape of a musical schema’s population curve and the nature of its definition can be summarized as follows: The degree of pointedness in the population curve of a musical schema varies directly with the number of constraints specified in the schema’s definition. The most elementary musical schemata would appear to be context-free style forms. Some of these structures are so little constrained by their definitions that they can be identified with equal frequency in all historical periods. For instance, the basic durational grouping short-long (e.g. J ) is present in practically every composition from Perotin to Crumb. A graph of this omnipresent relationship would approximate a horizontal line—a uniform, “‘flat’’ distribution (figure 6-3). Figure 6-3 represents a negative extreme of both defined constraint and population-curve slope. A positive extreme of defined constraint and population-curve slope would be reached by a schema’s definition so completely constrained that only a single composition could meet its specifications. For instance, the exact musical structure represented by Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony was created in 1807 and at no other time before or since. A graph of this circumstance would approximate a vertical line—a single, sharp spike (figure 6-4).

Population maximum

~~ Population curve

Population minimum FiGurRE 6-3.

y

Time

A uniform distribution

Population maximum

ey Population curve

Population minimum

Figure 6-4. A population restricted to one point in time

>

Time

102

_——Historical Survey

Somewhere between these two extremes lie all the remaining population curves. For example, a simple, though not universal, style form would have a gently sloping population curve reflective of its broad distribution (figure 6-5). On the other hand, a highly constrained structural complex would have a much more pointed population curve reflective of its special conjoining of subsidiary elements (figure 6-6). Population maximum

Population minimum FiGuRE 6-5.

Possible!population distribution of a common

»

Time

—>}>

Time

style form

Population maximum

Population minimum

=

FiGureE 6-6. Possible population distribution of a structural complex

Because there is no way to quantify constraint, it is impossible to predict either the exact contour of a population curve or the exact breadth of a historical distribution. But the first hypothesis does allow relative estimations of constraint to be translated into predictions of a relative nature. For example, it can predict that the constituent style forms in a composite style structure should all have broader historical distributions and less pointed population curves than the style structure itself, because the definition of the style structure stipulates additional constraints of context and interrelationship. As a case in point, the constituent style forms of the 1—7...4—3 style structure have

historical

frames

of two,

three,

four hundred

years

or more.

The

melodic

grouping 1—7—4—3, for instance, can be found across a three-century period from the mid-seventeenth century to the recent past (See examples 6-la and b). On the other hand, the 1—7...4—3 schema itself, with all its specified interrelationships, is restricted to little more than a century—from the 1730s to the mid-nineteenth century—and, as will be demonstrated, appears to peak sharply around the early 1770s.

A Schema Across Time

103

EXAMPLE 6-1. (a) Froberger, Suite No. 3 for Harpsichord (71649), Allemande, meas. 6—7; (b) Poulenc, Flute Sonata (1956), 1, meas. 5—7

The synchronic model implied by the arguments so far presented can account for the diachronic quantitative changes assumed by more traditional music histories. That is, with respect to the numerical rise and fall of a musical schema’s population, positing a statistically based population curve has an explanatory force equal to that of invoking an organic metaphor of growth and decay. But more is implied in the typical use of this metaphor than changes solely in population. When Henri Focillon, the great French art historian and a spokesman for the organic view of art, writes of the birth, growth, maturity, aging, and death of an artistic form, he is referring to stages that are qualitatively, not just quantitatively, different.’ In order for the present model to account for this type of diachronic, qualitative change, a second hypothesis must be introduced: A musical schema will exhibit a curve of typicality similar to its population curve. As discussed in the previous chapter, every instantiation of a schema has a greater or lesser degree of typicality, the schema prototype having the maximum. As mentioned earlier, a robin is more typical of the schema bird than is an ostrich, even though both are perfectly legitimate instantiations of the same schema. The dominant factor in most judgments of typicality appears to be a comparison of the inStantiation at hand with a central tendency abstracted from previously encountered examples of the same schema. The most obvious, though not the only, mechanism for this process of abstraction is an averaging of all the features of the set of known examples.’ If averaging features is a major mechanism of abstracting a central tendency, and if musical structures emanating from a narrow time period are more simi-

104

~—_—_ Historical Survey

lar than structures from disparate times, then the typicality of a musical structure will follow the structure’s population curve. The prototype of the structure will be found at the population peak, and increasingly atypical examples of the structure will be found farther and farther down either slope of the population curve. Think again of the high-level schema sonata form. At the peak of its population in the late eighteenth century we find the compositions by Haydn or Mozart that have always been regarded as the prototypical sonata forms, while much earlier (say with Monn or Sammartini) or much later (with Liszt or Bruckner) we find sonata forms that are

usually of low typicality. In psychological experiments designed to study typicality, the population dis-

tribution of a schema can be fixed. In music history, however, this controlled rela-

tionship of typicality and population is lacking: population affects typicality, and typicality affects population. For example, should a composer become aware of a schema underlying similar musical phrases in the works of his contemporaries, not only could he produce his own instances of this schema—adding to its population— but he could also fashion instances of the schema more (or less) consistent with the central tendency he has abstracted, thereby adding to (or subtracting from) the schema’s typicality. In certain situations, typicality and population may become locked in a feedback loop, changes in the one accelerating changes in the other. A similar feedback loop confronts the musicologist who, in cataloging instances of a specific schema, may be hesitant to cite examples of low typicality, with the result that the reported population becomes a function of typicality, even though it was some sample of the population that defined typicality in the first place. The model thus far introduced—essentially a psychologically based prediction of the formation and deformation of stable categories in a historical context of continual change—has been presumed to be symmetrical. There 1s, however, an important element in schema theory that, with respect to time, is decidedly asymmetrical— memory. Memory is conservative; it provides schemata derived from past experience to interpret present conditions. The result of this conservatism is a tendency to cling to an old schema beyond the point where a new schema might be more appropriate. The net effect of memory—whether one composer’s memory or the mnemonic force of a culture’s exemplary masterpieces—should be to make a structure’s population and typicality curves slightly asymmetrical. For instance, the retention of older, established schemata will inhibit the recognition of early examples of a schema. A subsequent realization of the new structure’s schema should include a reevaluation of earlier examples, with the effect of a sudden increase in perceived population. This increased population will trigger an acceleration in the population-typicality feedback loop beyond that predicted by the normal distribution. Figure 6-7 shows the effect of memory on the first half of a normal distribution. The descent from the peaks of population and typicality will be the reverse of figure 6-7—an early inhibition of the descent, followed by a subsequent acceleration (figure 6-8). This new descending curve results from the same process as the ascending curve; the schema

A Schema Across Time

105

eres

Population maximuin Initial

inhibition an”

a

o?

7

Subsequent

acceleration

o

Time



Population minimum

FiGuREF 6-7. Probable deviations from normal distribution—population rise

Population maximum

Initial inhibition

=

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See, ma

Population minimum FIGURE 6-8.

Wr ew an ames an on on on ~=

>

Ti

Time

Probable deviations from normal distribution—population fall

in question is retained until subsequent realizations of new schemata accelerate the decline in population and typicality. The above deviations in both the typicality and population curves:have the related effect of making the peaks of population and typicality appear closer to the left or early side of the overall curves (figure 6-9). Thus, if a certain schema had a onehundred-year history, one might expect its peaks of population and typicality to occur perhaps in the fortieth, and not the fiftieth, year of that history.

(a)

areak

(b)

Peak

«


——*

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NEIGHBORNOTE FIGURES

.

Bs

i

1.

4 y

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ot

EXAMPLE 8-1. Graun, Montezuma (1755), Sinfonia, 1, Allegro, meas. 43-48

'O-g

| O-9



EXAMPLE 8-2. A hypothetical version of example 8-1 with greater typicality

140

Historical Survey

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EXAMPLE 8-4. Graun, Montezuma (1755), Aria di Narvés (DDT ed., p. 54), Allegro, meas. 9-10

Sharp Increases

141

Midway between the maximum interconnection of overlapping processes and the minimum interconnection of a simple juxtaposition lies the procedure of linkage. One way to link two larger contexts is through a small contrapuntal device such as a suspension. In example 8-3, a descending leap from @ to @, characteristic of what I have called the high-@ melodic complex, creates the potential for an implied suspension and resolution. Graun exploits this potential in example 8-4. Although the

specific high-@ melodic complex shown in example 8-2 has, by this time, had a

rather long history, Graun provides it with a modern 1 —2...7—1 bass. Such a joining of the old with the new is a hallmark of Montezuma—a “‘reform”’ opera still firmly set in the venerable tradition of Hasse and Jommelli. In example 8-5, the links connecting example 8-4 with the preceding and succeeding passages are circled. The second link consists of the above-mentioned suspension and of the 1—7...4—3 structure ending on the same beat that begins an ascending linear progression. The first link can be largely explained as a commonchord modulation, though on a higher level the two-measure 1—7...4—3 style structure functions as the consequent phrase of a four-measure unit.’ Neither link deforms the internal relationships of the !—7...4—3 structure.

CONFORMANT FIGURES

LINEAR ASCENT

O—L6 gli eroi, che il cieww

—s

lo

LINEAR ASCENT

REPEATED NOTES

F:

EXAMPLE 8-5. Example 8-4 with its links to a larger context

142

= Historical Survey

The 1—7...4—3 style structure closest to the prototype is, as might be predicted, clearly separated from the passages that precede and follow it (see example 8-6). The separation of the 1—7...4—3 structure from the preceding passage is unequivocal, representing as it does the formal division between the first ritornello and the first quatrain of text. The separation from the succeeding passage is equally clear for the voice, although the accompaniment does provide two low-level connections (the iterated D in the bass and the ascending D-major triad in the violins).

del so- glio of- | fen- de,

pria

glo-

6)

+0

EXAMPLE 8-6. Graun, Montezuma (1755), Aria di Eupaforice (DDT ed., p. 156), Allegro, meas. 20-24

I do not mean to imply that a 1—7...4—3 style structure isolated from other passages 1s, 1n an aesthetic sense, intrinsically any better or worse than a structure crisscrossed by overlapping processes. Likewise, for a composer such as Graun, the distinction between a semiautonomous and a highly interconnected style structure need not indicate modernism or archaism. I do believe, however, that the more com-

partmentalized, modular style of example 8-6 1s closer to the schema prototype than are the interconnected or linked styles of examples 8-1 and 8-5, because typicality is not just the presence of schema-relevant patterns but also the absence of schemaextraneous ones.”

HAYDN’S EARLY SYMPHONIES Haydn’s earliest symphonies date from the end of the 1750s. The precise chronology of these works has not been established, so it is impossible to say which ones contain the earliest 1—7...4—3 style structures. Still, a few generalizations can be made about Haydn’s early use of this pattern. First, among those symphonies that may date. from 1760 or before, 1—7...4—3 style structures tend to be very small. In symphonies 15 and 19 (—?1761 and ?c1759/60 respectively), Haydn miniaturizes this

Sharp Increases

143

structure to the point where the entire schema, if indeed it is still recognizable as such, is presented in about one second (example 8-7).

(a)

(b)

0,8 Oo EXAMPLE 8-7. Haydn: (a) Symphony No.

15 in D Major (—?1761), 1, Presto,

meas. 37—38; (b) Symphony No. 19 in D Major (?c1759-60), i, Allegro,

meas. 42~—43

Had Haydn’s use of the 1—7...4—3 schema been traced back from his mature works to these early symphonies, the contrast between the tiny structures of example 8-7 and the four- and eight-measure structures of his later years might have suggested that the small structures “‘grew’’ into the larger ones. But, as I hope is evident from this and the preceding chapter, large 1—7...4—3 style structures were widespread long before Haydn’s early symphonies. If anything, the tiny structures of example 8-7 are near the end of a stylistic development stretching from C.P.E. Bach back to the seventeenth-century clavecinists. More in line with Haydn’s later style is the following modified high-@ complex from his Symphony “B”’ (i.e., the second of two early works outside the main list of Haydn symphonies) (example 8-8). Two features distinguish this high-@ complex from the earlier type seen in Veracini, Sammartini, or Graun (examples 7-24 and

8-4). First, the stepwise connection of @ with @ has been abandoned (example

8-9). In the earlier type, the @ is quite prominent as both the terminus of the ascending third progression and the end of the small rhythmic grouping Sd. . This com-

144

= Historical Survey

plex, as mentioned earlier, permits interpretation as both 1—7...4—3 and 1-2-3. Haydn’s usage diminishes the prominence of @, making it serve as an upbeat to the following 4—3 dyad. The significance of this small alteration is that a structure carried over from a period of greater complexity has been simplified in such a way as to suppress one of its former relationships.

a

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EXAMPLE 8-9. A change in the high-@ melodic complex

The second new feature in example 8-8 is the addition of a descending motive prior to the 1—7 dyad. This appears to be a type of “‘back-formation.”’ That is, to the original high-@ melodic complex is prefixed a descending motive (the first two notes of example 8-8’s melody, Bb—G), which, after the fact, makes the 2—4 descending leap seem like a derivative, answering motive. Back-formations are common in colloquial speech. For instance, colloquial verbs like orientate and connotate are back-formations derived from orientation and connotation.

In a similar sense,

the historically antecedent 2—4 leap becomes, in the 1—7...4—3 style structures of the Classic style, an apparent consequence of a preceding motive, most frequently 5—1 (see example 8-10). The conformance of these two motives strengthens the bipartite form characteristic of the 1—7...4—3 prototype.

Historical development

9 r > (SSE = Apparent

classical syntax

EXAMPLE 8-10. Changes in the high-@ complex

146

~=Historical Survey If example

8-8 demonstrates

a method

of balancing the asymmetrical,

older

high-@ complex by transferring a motive from the structure’s second half back to its first half, then example 8-11 demonstrates the reverse procedure. That is, the ascending third 7—2 (see line E of example 8-11), which is an important feature of the older high-@ melodic complex, is balanced by the addition of another ascending third, 3—5, to the end of the structure. The implications of this small addition are A

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EXAMPLE 8-11. Haydn, Symphony No. 7 in C Major, “Le midi” (1761), 1, Allegro, meas.

121-24

Sharp Increases

147

twofold: new ways—often involving conformant relationships—of limiting the closure of 1—7...4—3 style structures and creating connections with subsequent passages are developed; and 1—7...4—3 structures are created wherein the boundary dyads are no longer always phrase endings, but sometimes in the middle or even at the beginning of conformant phrases. The last example is, of course, much longer than the minute examples 8-7 and 8-8. Four-measure 1—7...4—3 structures are, within the limits of presumption afforded by an uncertain chronology, present in all but the very earliest of Haydn’s symphonies. Example 8-12 shows a four-measure phrase probably derived from the older high-@ complex. An archaic feature of this phrase is the active, skipping bass line. A more modern feature is the mirror or complementary contours of the descending sixteenth-notes in the bass and the ascending sixteenth-notes in the melody.

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In the slightly later example 8-13 the tendency toward still more evident. Although complementary contours are common in common 1-7...4—3 style structures generally employ ordinary conformance. For example, the two-measure

complementary contours is the Classic style, the more the simpler relationship of 1—7...4—3 style structure

embedded in the four-measure I°—II°—V—I schema in example 8-14 (and slightly deformed by it; see the discussion of example 4-15) uses conformant descending triads prior to each dyad.

Sharp Increases

P

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EXAMPLE 8-14. Haydn, Symphony No. 31 in D Major, “Hornsignal” (1765), 1, Allegro, meas. 25-28

It is interesting to observe that all the Haydn examples presented in this section have continuous melodies. In other words, no notated rest intervenes between the 1-7 and 4—3 dyads. This small feature appears to distinguish most of Haydn’s 1—7...4—3 style structures written before 1765 or 1766 from those written later. A rest or obvious articulation after the first half of the |—7...4—3 structure helps to facilitate perception of the schema in several ways. First, silence closes off the first half of the form. Second, silence provides a ground against which the beginning of the second half of the form can be detected. Third, the temporary cessation of new melodic information allows a listener to more fully process the first half of the form. This last point is important, because the mental processing of a continuous string of melodic information is of necessity largely retrospective. Only when the brain is given opportunities to “catch up” with the flow of stimuli can the prospective or implicative force of musical schemata be fully developed. As an illustration of this phenomenon, notice how much more implied the second half of example 8-15 (1767) seems

than the corresponding segment of the more continuous example 8-14 (1765). The typicality of example 8-15 and several other phrases written after 1765 approaches that of the schema prototype. These near prototypes produced by Haydn and others during the later 1760s are the topic of the following section.

150 —_—- Historical Survey

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8-15. Haydn, Symphony No. 35 in B}

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Major (1767), 1, Allegro di

17—20

PROTOTYPES

Though historically backwards, the procedure adopted in discussing the three phrases presented in this section is to view them as complications of a later and simpler prototype. The advantage of this approach is evident from a consideration of example 8-16 by Dittersdorf. Since this phrase was written by 1766 at the latest, only in a comparative and not a historical sense can it be considered an alteration of a prototype by Mozart written in late 1771 (example 8-17). Yet this comparison quickly reveals two important features of the Dittersdorf example—its lack of a rest between the two halves of the structure, and the presence of many repeated notes in the melody. Closely related to the Dittersdorf example is a phrase by the eleven-year-old Mozart (example 8-18). The first half of this example is quite near the prototype, but the second half, with the large presence of @, creates some complications. The phrases by Mozart and Dittersdorf are surprisingly similar. Inasmuch as Mozart wrote his example in Vienna, we cannot exclude the possibility of a direct influence from one composer to the other. In fact, one traditional approach to explaining this similarity would be to determine if there was actual contact between the composers. Another approach would be to claim that these phrases are similar only

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9-12

152

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because the numerous stylistic constraints of Classic music inevitably result in like productions. Because proof of direct influence is very difficult to establish and an appeal to the uniformity of the Classic style would seem to posit a cause incommensurate with such a restricted musical effect, I would argue that consideration must first be given

to acorollary derived from the model of chapter 6. Specifically, since there is tremendous variation among 1-—7...4—3 style structures at the extremes of the structure’s historical frame, and since there should be only slight variation among structures

Sharp Increases

153

identifiable as 1—7...4—3 prototypes, it follows that the structure’s range of variation ought to change inversely with the structure’s curves of population and typicality. The similarity of the two phrases mentioned above may be due to a very specific set of historical and psychological constraints that converge in the later 1760s. Taken to its extreme, this corollary implies the existence of identical melodies at the peak of population and typicality. Surprising as it may seem, this occurs and will be discussed in the next chapter. As should be expected, Haydn also made a contribution to the category of near prototypes. In the Trio of his Symphony No. 32 (written no later than 1766) he wrote

a phrase that eliminates all schema-extraneous patterns until the fourth measure (example 8-19). It should be noted once again that this phrase has no written indication of an articulation between its first and second halves. Only this small feature and the deformation of the 4—3 dyad caused by the triplet descent to the tonic separate example 8-19 from the prototypes of the 1770s.

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154

~——-Historical Survey

SCHEMA

VARIANTS

A composer's unique experiences and individual style can lead him to favor some variant form of a musical schema. Such may be the case with Florian Gassmann. His Italian training and Viennese employment gave him access to a broad range of important stylistic influences that, as an examination of his many symphonies reveals, must have included contact with characteristic examples of the 1—7...4—3 schema. For instance, example 8-20a (from 1765).is, in terms of its particular incorporation of a large 5...4—3 pattern, closer to the polished manner of Cambini (example 8-20b) or Mozart (example 8-20c) in the mid- to late 1770s than to the contemporary structures of Haydn.

EXAMPLE 8-20. (a) Gassmann, Symphony in C Minor, Hill No. 23 (1765), iv, Allegro molto, meas. 37—40; (b) Cambini, Symphonie concertante No. 6

in F Major, Brook II, p. 144 (1776), 1, Allegro, meas. 1-4; (c) Mozart,’ Serenade in D Major, “‘Posthorn,’’ KV 320 (1779), 1, Allegro con spirito, meas. 197—200

Sharp Increases

155

The variant feature of Gassmann’s personal approach to the 1-—7...4—3 style structure seems to be a preference for a 3—2...7—1 bass instead of the prototypical 1-2...7—1 pattern. This variant, already suggested in example 8-3 by Graun, creates an implied descending bass line and slightly shifts the structure’s balance toward its second half (example 8-21). A fine example of this bass is found in the gavottelike finale of Gassmann’s Symphony No. 85 (example 8-22). Another example confirms a modulation to the dominant, using the standard high-@ melodic complex, in the opening movement of Gassmann’s Symphony No. 26 (example 8-23).

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The Peak

167

A second example from the same symphony further illustrates Haydn’s idiosyncratic treatment of detail (example 9-9). The small neighbor-note figures are only loosely connected to the 1-—7...4—3 dyads. Normally, these figures would be fixed to © and ©, matching the harmonic roots of the overall form and setting up two conformant descending thirds (example 9-10). This arrangement better serves the large-scale design of the phrase but involves a small-scale contrapuntal problem— an implied dissonant fourth (example 9-11). Haydn’s phrase avoids this small-scale

problem but creates another idiosyncratic melody.

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The Peak

175

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Symphony

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in G Major,

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iii, Allegro,

1

KV

283 (189h) (early

1—4

being a prototype for this configuration. The examples I found in the 1770s all have slightly more complicated structures. For instance, even though the phrase by Mozart in example 9-21 has a melody restricted to just the two basic conjunct units, the effect of the four tied notes is quite sophisticated. The first two notes of each descending triad are subtly disassociated from the third note—a technique that Mozart further developed in his Keyboard Sonata in G Major (example 9-22). In contrast to the economy of the two preceding phrases by Mozart, the following examples by Jean-Guillain Cardon and Vanhal are somewhat prolix. Cardon uses a large number of low-level iterations in the incipit to his Symphony in Bb Major, Op. 10 (example 9-23). Vanhal also uses repeated notes, but a more interesting fea-

ture of his phrase is the interaction of the descending triads with the half notes ©

and @ in the melody (example 9-24). He chooses not to create the more conformant versions in example 9-25. Vanhal’s original version has a more balanced tessitura,

176

Historical Survey

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EXAMPLE 9-50. A summation of structures present or suggested in example 9-43

An even more abstract representation of example 9-50 symbolizes what was one of the standard higher-level forms of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries (figure 9-4). One or more processes lead up from an initial schema to a

closing schema, the whole form having an arclike melodic contour.”

Closing

schema

Initial schema

FiGureE 9-4.

A further abstraction of example 9-50

190

Historical Survey

SCHEMATIC PERCEPTION Imagine a foreign language interpreter hired by a king to simultaneously translate an ambassador’s speech. The interpreter is told beforehand that perfect grammar must be used at all times, regardless of how the ambassador speaks, and that he is forbid-

den to admit that he did not understand what the ambassador said. Imagine also that the ambassador has a speech impediment and speaks an obscure dialect little known to the interpreter. Obviously, what the king thinks the ambassador said and what he actually said may be quite different—everything depends on the interpreter. Our cognitive schemata function somewhat like the interpreter in the story, processing the confusing messages of sensory stimuli and providing us with coherent perceptions. This schematic perception is a great time-saver—the king does not have to look up every word of the ambassador’s speech in a dictionary—but the time saved is at the cost of occasionally being misled, of having to accept the interpreter’s version of a message. In this short section, I present two examples of phrases that sound like or, perhaps more accurately, are remembered to have sounded like 1—7...4—3 style structures when in fact they lack central features of this schema. In both cases it appears that the composers took advantage of schematic perception to conceal or smooth over the effect of a harmonic modulation. The first example is from the Andante of Mozart’s Symphony KV 200 (example 9-51). The 1-7 dyad is placed in parentheses to indicate that only in retrospect can it be considered as such. In the main key of F major the repeated note C is not @ but ©, and at the beginning of the second measure the movement of the bass does not make this C dissonant (example 9-52). The descending tetrachord in the bass is also unsuited to form part of a 1-7...4—3 style structure. A simpler version of such a combination makes this incompatibility obvious (example 9-53). In terms of voiceleading norms, this bass would have been more likely to have had the melody in example 9-54.

Oo EXAMPLE 9-51. Mozart, Symphony in C Major, KV 200 (189k) (71773), 11, Andante, meas.

11—14



The Peak

191

instead of

EXAMPLE 9-52. Counterpoint in meas. 11-12 of example 9-51

EXAMPLE 9-53. Potential for parallel fifths

when 1-7...4—3 melody is com-

bined with descending tetrachord

EXAMPLE 9-55.

Mozart, Symphony

dante, meas.

in C Major, KV 200 (189k) (71773), 1, An-

1—4

The actual opening theme of this Andante combines a slightly less processive version of the bass and harmony of example 9-54 with a latent 1—7...4—3 melody (example 9-55). In the phrase first cited in example 9-51, the first two measures of example 9-55 are repeated, but then a change in the harmony (V3 in C major) helps

to bring about a reinterpretation of the latent 1-—7...4—3 melody. Such a reinterpretation must begin after the phrase’s second measure and is probably not confirmed until after the phrase’s cadence.

192

Historical Survey

An interesting technical matter is the placement of the metric boundary of the 4—3 dyad. Mozart had two options, shown in example 9-56. Because Mozart chose the delayed placement (example 9-56a), and because the two metric boundaries of a |—7...4—3 schema are usually placed in the same metric position, it is likely that the first metric boundary of Mozart’s own mental reinterpretation of this phrase had the position shown in example 9-57. This placement makes sense not only because the melodic C in the second measure is not a dissonance (as would be required if it followed the metric boundary), but also because the process of reinterpretation will extend the area of dominant harmony in C major back to the appearance of the Bk—F tritone. (a)

EXAMPLE 9-56. Optional metric boundaries for the 4—3 dyad of example

9-51

EXAMPLE

9-57. Retrospective

metric

boundary for the 1—7 dyad of example 9-51

|

The second example of schematic perception comes from the Andante of Cam-

bini’s Symphony in D Major of 1776 (example 9-58). In contrast to the Mozart example, the opening two measures of this phrase form the perfectly regular first half of a 1—7...4—3 style structure. The position of the high A in the second measure suggests some expanded form of a high-@ melodic complex, perhaps like the hypothetical realization in example 9-59, Cambini’s own phrase uses the likelihood of such a realization to smooth over a modulation to the dominant key area (example 9-60). The strong conformance of measures 18 and 20 serves to weld this phrase together and to give the impression of a four-measure 1—7...4—3 style structure,

even though paradoxically the same pitches (G and F#) that were © and ©@

at the

beginning of the schema are @ and © at its end. The regularizing effect of the 1-—7...4-—3 schema is quite strong; if after playing through this phrase one thinks back to the 1—7 dyad in measure

18, it is difficult not to remember it as D—C} rather

vivid than the small

structure embedded

than the actual G—F#. ample 9-61).

The large, illusory 1—7...4—3 style structure seems more

1—7...4—3

in the last two measures (ex-

The Peak

a

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EXAMPLE 9-58. Cambini, Symphony in D Major, Op. 5, No. 1 (1776), ii, Andante, meas. 17-18

EXAMPLE 9-59. Hypothetical continuation of example 9-58

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EXAMPLE 9-60. Cambini, Symphony in D Major, Op. 5, No. 1 (1776), ii, Andante, meas. 17—20

EXAMPLE 9-61. Small 1—7...4—3 style structure embedded in example 9-60

193

194

= Historical Survey

SUMMARY A distinction was made between a prototype as a hypothetical abstraction and as “‘a perfect example of a particular type.”’ It was found that some examples, though close to the hypothetical abstraction of a 1—7...4—3 prototype, were actually too idiosyncratic to be considered perfect examples of this structural category. The most representative, most generic examples of the 1—7...4—3 style structure conformed not only with the mid-level, structural requirements but also with the low-level norms of rhythmic and melodic activity of the 1770s. In previous chapters, two common 1—7...4—3 melodic complexes were discussed: the linear-descent complex (chapter 7) and the high-@ complex (chapters 7 and 8). In this chapter, a third type was introduced, the descending-triads melodic complex. This complex, a close relative and possible descendant of the high-@ complex, can exist in four different configurations. The fact that the configuration predominantly chosen is the simplest and has two conformant halves suggests that simplicity and conformance were two preferred traits. Conformance remained a preferred trait throughout the 1770s, but the same cannot be said of simplicity. The wide selection of examples by Mozart and Haydn presented in this chapter shows that 1—7...4—3 style structures became increasingly complicated as the decade progressed. There was a reemergence of subsidiary patterns and overlapping processes. Haydn, in particular, frequently places the 1—7 and 4—3 dyads in the midst of a stream of eighth-notes. This technique reintegrates the dyads into a more continuous melodic flow but also makes them less prominent. Some of the possible confusions that these complications might have brought about were allayed by the growing use of orchestration to highlight and differentiate the multiple structures of complex phrases. Tone color proved to be a readily perceived feature that was ideal for establishing an immediate sense of similarity between short passages (or even single chords) separated by other material.

CHAPTER

10

1780-1794: New Complications A precipitous decline in the population of the 1—7...4—3 schema occurs between the late 1770s and the early 1780s. As figure 10-1 shows, during 1780-84 the number of examples is only half that of the preceding five-year interval. The population then rises a little in the later 1780s, but it remains far below the peak of the early 1770s. The model of chapter 6 predicted this overall decline in population. The additional dip in population in the early 1780s, however, was not predicted. There are at least two possible explanations, not mutually exclusive, for this phenomenon. First, the dip and subsequent slight rebound in population could have been created by the rise of anew 1—7...4—3 melodic complex, as shown in figure 10-2. Or, second, the dip might reflect a lowering of the total number of musical examples for that fiveyear interval (figure 10-3). Regarding the first explanation, there does not appear to be any single new 1—7...4-—3 complex that has the subsidiary population curve called for in figure 10-2 (although a new formal type does become more prominent later in this period). Regarding the second explanation, it is possible that the low number of 1—7...4-3 style structures in the interval 1780—84 is a result of a sharp decrease in the number of symphonies Mozart composed at that time. Mozart and Haydn symphonies figure prominently in the statistics used in this study, and it is only to be expected that significant changes in their rates of composing symphonies should have some impact on the reported population curve. Of course this anomaly in the population curve might also be attributable to flaws in my sampling method. The whole matter of statistics of this kind will be discussed again in chapter 12. This chapter begins with a description of the retention in the 1780s of 1—7...4-3 structural types characteristic of the 1770s. Although several basic structural types did persist into the 1780s, the typicality of individual examples is generally lower than in the 1770s. Part of the decline in typicality 1s due to a general complication of the melodic pattern networks; more subsidiary patterns are incorporated, and the schema boundaries are blurred by overlapping processes. This is especially evident

196

oS 4

riazslisrctinans

Examples found per 5-year interval

in

Historical Survey

17200 25 Figure 10-1.

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

70

75

80

Population of 1—7...4—3 style structures, 1720-1794

85

90

95

New Complications

197

Vv

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Figure 10-2. A change in aschema’s population due to a temporary rise of a new melodic complex

Total number of

examples per year

1° |

FiGurE 10-3.

Drop in total population

A change in a schema’s population due to a temporary drop in

the sampled population

in Mozart’s last symphonies. One manifestation of this trend is the melodic ornamentation of the terminal schema dyad 4—3, discussed in relation both to the aria “Batti, batti”’ from Mozart’s Don Giovanni and to several examples from late Haydn

symphonies. There are also changes in musical form that adversely affected typicality. One alteration, frequent in Haydn, is simply to stretch the form by delaying the terminal schema event. Another more fundamental change is to adopt a less closed formal

type—the x 1-7...4-3

style structure (see the discussion of ex-

ample 5-33 in chapter 5). The appearance of this phrase type, with its dynamic linkage of subphrases, may be viewed on the one hand as a type of schema mutation in response to new trends, or on the other hand as a return to an old pattern seldom seen since the late Baroque.

198

= Historical Survey

THE RETENTION

OF STRUCTURAL

TYPES

In conjunction with the lowered population and typicality of 1—7...4—3 style structures in this period, there is an increasing range of variation among examples. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the most constrained structural type—prototypes and near prototypes. Even examples with the prototypical 1—7...4—3 melody demonstrate new departures from the norms of the previous period. For instance, in the small episode from the Andante of Mozart’s “Linz” Symphony in example 10-1, the diminished seventh chords, the larger F-major context, the chromatic line C—Bh—Bb, and the weak metric positions of the resolutions of the several dissonances combine to give this phrase very low typicality in spite of its prototypical melody and simple bass.

:

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ry

pe

CHROMATIC DESCENT

t

t

vii?

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rit a

CIRCLE OF

FIFTHS

EXAMPLE 10-1. Mozart, Symphony in C Major, “Linz,” KV 425 (1783), ii, Andante, meas. 96

New Complications

199

Another example, from the Sanctus of Haydn’s Missa Cellensis, introduces fer-

matas (example 10-2). The fermatas on © and © help to close off the two dyads and

do not interfere with the larger 1—7...4—3...6-5 pattern (example 10-3). When Haydn restates the theme, however, he chooses to use a lower-level, linear continuation of the structure and, perhaps because a fermata on ® would interrupt this linear

continuation, he removes both fermatas (example

10-4).

.

San-

' ctus,



san-

| ctus,

sanctus

EXAMPLE 10-2. Haydn, Mass No. 6, Missa Cellensis (Mariazellermesse) (1782), Sanctus, meas. 1—5

OG) La? I

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15

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EXAMPLE 10-4. The melody of example 10-2 as repeated at meas. 11

Some of the more prototypical 1—7...4-3 structures from this period are not found in symphonies. For example, I could find no symphonic equivalents of the two phrases in example 10-5, from a Vanhal string quartet. There are, to be sure, fea-

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EXAMPLE 10-6. Haydn, Symphony No. 74 in E, Major (71780), iti, Allegretto,

meas. 2—3

Historical Survey (a)

EXAMPLE 10-7. (a) The melody of example 10-6 rewritten without the superordinate 3—4-5 pattern; (b) the melody of example 10-6 rewritten with less motivic conformance

Hh

202

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ASCENDING TRICHORDS

EXAMPLE 10-8. Haydn, Symphony No. 93 in D Major (1791), i, Allegro assai, meas. 120-22

New Complications

203

Haydn’s decision to incorporate the superordinate pattern 3—4—5 while maintaining all the subordinate rhythmic and conformant melodic patterns forced the mid-level

1—7...4—3 structure of example

this study an example’s 4—3 dyad is either the superordinate pattern or the mid-level structure could have was seen much earlier in the phrase

10-6 out of balance; for the first time in

placed ahead of its second metric boundary. Had one of the subordinate patterns been sacrificed, been regularized (example 10-7). Thus, just as by Pollarolo from the 1720s (example 7-5), com-

positional attention directed toward a lower or a higher level of structure can leave a

mid-level pattern like the 1—7...4—3 schema slightly out of focus. The standard 1—7...4—3 melodic complexes were also retained into the 1780s and early 1790s. For instance, the high-@ complex, though rare, can be found in both the original form (example 10-8) and the simplified form (example 10-9). Notice how in example 10-9 the tendency toward larger patterns involving a 6—5 continuation is evident (line C). $—H



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EXAMPLE 10-9. Haydn, Symphony No. 85 in Bb Major, **La reine” (71785), iv, Presto, meas. 9-12

204

Historical Survey

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EXAMPLE 10-10. Haydn, Symphony No. 85 in Bb Major, “La reine” (71785), iv, Presto, meas. 25—28

New Complications

(a)

y

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(b)

EXAMPLE 10-11. Haydn, Symphony No. 89 in F Major (1787), 1, Vivace: (a) meas. 15—16; (b) meas. 25—26

From the same movement as example 10-9 comes an example of the descendingtriads melodic complex (example 10-10). The shift of the Bb in the first measure of the melody to the higher octave keeps the phrase in a narrower range, creates a complementary melodic contour, and also permits the forming of an overlapping 1-2-3 pattern. Haydn weakens the closure of the 1-7 and 4—3 dyads by appending to each a string of sixteenth-notes (line B). Two versions of another descending-triads complex show the now common transformation of descending triads into descending scales (example 10-11).

206

Historical Survey

A linear-descent melodic complex is found in the incipit to Boccherini’s Symphony G520 (example 10-12, lines D and £). This incipit shares most of the idiostructural arrangement of the 1—7.,.4—3, 5...4—3, and linear-descent patterns found in Mozart's ““Posthorn” Serenade (see examples 9-29 to 9-32) of ten years earlier. The main difference between the Boccherini and Mozart examples is that Boccherini makes the 5...4—3 pattern more prominent by placing it above the rest of the phrase. Of course, in doing this he has to weaken the lower-level continuation of the linear

descent by placing the final G and F# up an octave.

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EXAMPLE 10-12. Boccherini, Symphony in D Major, Op. 42, G520 (1789), 1, Allegro, meas. 1-4

Besides retaining most of the structural types of the 1770s, this later period also retained and developed the structural complications that reemerged in the later 1770s. One of these complications was the reintroduction of overlapping processes. In example 10-13, two four-measure processes—a linear descent in the bass (line G)

and an ascending 6—5...1—7...4—3 process in the melody (line B)—subsume a twomeasure 1—7...4—3 structure.

New Complications

5

cert

t ( {

tt

Ee

E
—C motive (line C). The effect of this

integration on the schema itself is lowered typicality, because it is very rare for a 1—7...4—3 style structure to begin with @ in the melody. As a final example of techniques from the later 1770s retained in this period, I present the opening phrase of the Minuet from Haydn’s Symphony No. 99 (example 10-15). Notice Haydn’s trademark of following each dyad with a descending string of equal note values leading down first to © and then to @ (line F). Notice also the distinction made between background (piano, high, unison) and foreground (forte, low, chordal).

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Major (1792), iv, Presto,

New Complications

209

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EXAMPLE

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bat-ti, o bel Ma- set- to, la

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Sa ZO wi =

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10-17 below l4); 3

tf

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212

Historical Survey

Melodic variation in repeated phrases does not, of course, always have to be in the direction of shorter note values, trills, turns, and other devices. Later in Mozart’s ‘Batti, batti,”’ for example, the theme itself is presented by the orchestra while Zerlina adds what might be described as a simplified melodic commentary that emphasizes the underlying schema (example 10-18). These “‘added’’ melodies are neither distinct countermelodies nor straightforward simplifications of the “Batti, batti’’ theme. Instead, they are simpler 1—7...4—3 melodic complexes presented simultaneously with the “Batti, batti’’ theme. The first 1s a linear-descent complex and the

second a high-@ complex.’

Mozart was not alone in altering the 4—3 dyad of 1—7...4—3 style structures. Haydn also produced several comparable examples. In his Symphony No. 81 one can see a phrase where the 1-7 dyad, though brief, at least has a direct melodic connection, while the 4—3 dyad is both ornamented and indirect (example 10-19). In Haydn’s Symphony No. 96 a rest is actually introduced to separate the 4—3 dyad (example 10-20).

New Complications

EXAMPLE

10-18. Mozart,

Don Giovanni (1787), Act 1, No.

12, Aria di Zerlina,

‘Batti, batti’’: (a) meas. 9-12; (b) meas. 45-48

dre

90

EXAMPLE 10-19. Haydn, Symphony No. 81 in G Major (1784), 1, Vivace, meas. 28-31

(7)

EXAMPLE

I

10-20. Haydn, Symphony No. 96 in D Major, “The Miracle” (1791),

ii, Andante,

meas. 2-3

213

214

Historical Survey Ob.

9-0 EXAMPLE 10-21. Rigel, Symphony in D Minor, Op. 21, No. 2, Brook II], p. 86 (1785), i, Allegro maestoso, meas. 1—4

rp Struggle” ———____. Woodwinds

e—@-49 6

§

(inner voices

omitted)

Bass

7

Jilid (7) 2)

EXAMPLE

10-22. Ragué,

Symphony

in D Minor,

p. 109 (1786), 1, Allegro maestoso, meas.

Op.

1-10

10, No.

1, Brook III,

New Complications

French symphonists of somewhat more in line with Henri-Joseph Rigel uses an 10-21, although he clarifies

215

the period also begin avoiding the obvious 4-3 dyad, Haydn’s procedures than with Mozart’s. For instance, ornate 4—3 dyad, as shown in the violins of example the dyad with the simpler 3-—2...4—3 pattern in the

oboes. In the last three examples, @ has been preceded by a fleeting @. LouisCharles Ragué makes this @ a scending 5—4—3—2-1

little longer to capitalize on the opposition of de-

and ascending 2—3—#4—5 (in the violins). This opposition is

worked out in four measures the later section, where 4—3 direct, unobscured presence. appoggiatura, though perhaps The final example of an

of extended “struggle’’ (example 10-22). Note that in becomes the antithesis of 4-5, the 4-3 dyad has a The final 4—3 dyad (measure 10) even appears as an too late to recall the earlier 1—7 dyad. obscured 4—3 dyad can also serve as the first example

of delaying the arrival of © (example 10-23). The foreground (jfortissimo)/back-

ground ( piano) effect and the stepwise transposition of the second half of the phrase are additional characteristics of the style of the 1780s. In example 10-23, Haydn obscures the 4—3 dyad by moving it into the second violin part and delays the arrival of @ and the attendant tonic harmony by an extra two beats. The held © in the first violins then resumes its descent to ©, making the smoothest possible juncture between the 1—7...4—3 and the cadential 5—4—3-—2-1 style structures.

@-@-0-0

o> EXAMPLE 10-23. Haydn, meas. 1-7

Symphony

No.

75 in D Major (—1781),

1, Grave,

216

Historical Survey

Haydn’s oeuvre contains numerous instances of delaying the arrival of @. Like melodic ornamentation, a delaying technique can be used to vary and extend a repetition of a 1—7...4—3 structure. For instance, when the Minuet theme (example 10-24a) returns in Haydn’s “*Surprise’’ Symphony (example 10-24b), @ is first put off for an additional measure and then held by a fermata. The © finally arrives, but it is a mere upbeat, the full tonic cadence forestalled for another six measures. The Same combined use of variation and extension characterizes the repeat of a small

1—7...4—3 structure from Haydn’s Symphony No. 97 (example 10-25). Example

10-25a is distinguished from the near prototypes of the 1770s only by the technical detail of having the bass note C under the dominant chord in the second measure. In example 10-25b, on the other hand, @ is greatly prolonged and ® is harmonized with a deceptive cadence.

(a)

|

EXAMPLE 10-24. Haydn, Symphony No. 94 in G Major, “The Surprise” (1791), iii, Allegro molto: (a) meas. 1—8; (b) meas. 41—50

New Complications

217

(a)

(deceptive cadence)

i(5) \

1Q

!

EXAMPLE 10-25. Haydn, Symphony No. 97 in C Major (1792), iv, Presto assai: (a) meas. 3—4; (b) meas. 258-61

While examples 10-24 and 10-25 represent playful alterations of previously established phrases, example 10-26 shows the potential abrogation of the 4—3 dyad used to portray a dramatic character’s indecision.” Haydn stretched the normal fourmeasure compass of this type of 1—7...4—3 structure to eight measures by literally bringing the phrase to a complete halt, tentatively beginning again with @ still in the melody and @ in the bass, and then finally placing @ in the bass and moving the melody convincingly toward the 4—3 dyad. One could hardly ask for a better matching of musical syntax and poetic text. (4)->(to m. 7)

ParBri

to leave.

,

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non | I

pos-_ can-

so. not.

Sf

070 (from m. 4}9

@t

10-43. Veracini, Sonate Accademiche, Op. 2 (1744), No. 3, i, Alle-

gro, meas.

1-8

(x)

> |

°f,

°f,

On

OHO

simile

I

EXAMPLE 10-44. Ragué, Symphony in D Minor, Op. 10, No. 1, Brook pp. 128-29 (1786-87), i11, Vivace non tanto, meas. 20-24

III,

228

Historical Survey

C:

F:

EXAMPLE 10-45. Bréval, Symphonie concertante in F Major, Op. 38, Brook III, p. 208 (71795), u, Adagio, meas. 54-57

The reemergence of the x1-7...4-3 Style structure is but another sign of late eighteenth-century composers either rediscovering or reinventing ways of writing more open-ended, processive phrases. The specified differences between a 1-7...4-3 andanx 1-7...4-3 Style structure may seem slight, but the effect of these differences on a phrase’s closure is surprisingly great. A 1—7...4—3 structure from the early 1770s can be such a closed entity that practically all its implications are realized or neutralized within the phrase itself. The incipit in example 10-46, from an Ordonez symphony, presents such a phrase. To change this incipit into a more

processive,

phrases of the phrase halves vided such an We shall Structure was

EXAMPLE

implicative

phrase—in

other words,

to bring

it into line

10-46.

Ordonez, Symphony

in F Minor, Brown 1: F12(min) (1773), i,

Allegro moderato, meas. 1-6

=

with

late 1780s and early 1790s—all that is necessary is to make the two overlap, thereby creating anx 1-7...4-3 style structure. I have proaltered version in example 10-47, along with a possible continuation. see in the next chapter that the more open-ended x_1—7...4—3 style preferred by many nineteenth-century composers.

=

'

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\

EXAMPLE 10-47. A hypothetical transformation x I-7...4—3 style structure

=_

of example

10-46

into

an

CHAPTER

l l

1795-1900: A Legacy With this final chapter of historical exposition we return to a situation not unlike that of the period 1720-1754 (chapter 7). As the graph in figure 11-1 indicates, the 1—7...4—3 schema in the nineteenth century has the very low population that it had in the early eighteenth century. We will see that this period also resembles the early eighteenth century in having 1—7...4—3 structures of very low typicality. Whereas many of the examples presented in relation to the 1760s, 1770s, and 1780s are representative of entire categories of 1—7...4—3 structures, most of the examples presented in this chapter are one-of-a-kind phrases—true idiostructural creations.

50

Examples found per 5-year interval

45 40) 35

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ay,

a

i.

25°35" 45 '55 ' 65° 75° 85% 95 * 05 § 15 § 25° 35 ' 45° 55° 65° 75 * 85 ° 95 1720 30 40 50 60 7 80 90 1800 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 1900

FiGureE I|1-1.

Population of 1—7...4-—3 style structures, 1720-1900

230 ~— Historical Survey [ have chosen five topics through which to approach these idiosyncratic phrases. In the first I examine the end of the eighteenth century and include examples by Haydn, Bréval, Beecke, and Vandenbroeck.

In the second I discuss the retention in

the nineteenth century of the type of large 1—7...4—3 style structure seen, for example, in the opening theme of Mozart’s Symphony No. 39 in E> Major. The Franco-Italian focus of this phrase type is evident from some of the composers involved: Rossini, Mercadante, Berlioz, and Méhul. The third topic is organized more by stylistic affinity, and includes examples by Weber, Schubert, Eberl, Beethoven, and Cherubini. The fourth topic is directed toward a younger, somewhat more north-

erm group of composers—Berwald, Henselt, Schumann, and Wagner. Finally, in the

fifth topic I address the anomalous appearance of 1—7...4—3 style structures with high typicality in a period of very low population. Some phrases can be explained as evocations of the past. For example, a composer might use an eighteenth-century musical schema as a sign for the eighteenth century itself. Other phrases seem to be outside the realm of art music. In a few cases the denigratory term Trivialmusik may be applicable; in others, the more objective term Schema-Musik better explains the structures under consideration. In many instances, the early nineteenth-century phrases to be discussed are examples of juvenilia. Whether by exposure to provincial repertories or to the stylistic preferences of elderly teachers, several composers with mature styles antithetical to the 1—7...4—3 schema produced 1—7...4—3 structures in their teens or twenties. Wagner is the obvious example, though this phenomenon can also be observed in Mendelssohn and Schubert. As the composers of the Classic style died and the eighteenth-century legacy came to be regarded as Bach, some late Mozart, late Haydn, and Beethoven, it is possible that by the 1840s and 1850s student composers were no longer exposed to music from the peak period of the 1—7...4—3 style structure. This may explain why the 1—7...4—3 structure appears to be absent from the early works of Brahms. My single example by Brahms comes from late in his life, perhaps in his role as conservator of tradition. Even then, the phrase in question is an instance of the gap-fill, linear-descent melodic complex (like that found in Schumann’s ‘“‘Wehmut”’), rather than a reworking of a specifically Classic phrase type. Those composers of Brahms’s generation who did write 1—7...4—3 style structures of high typicality—for example, Anton Rubinstein and Ponchielli—have been censured, even in their own day, for their “‘conventionality.”” The basis for this censure will be shown to be critical distaste for scriptlike schemata in Romantic art music. THE CLOSE OF THE EIGHTEENTH

CENTURY

Relatively few symphonies are available from the last five years of the eighteenth century, making it difficult to discern any unifying characteristics among the handful of 1—7...4—3 style structures from the period. For instance, example 11-1 by Ignaz

A Legacy

231

(Franz) von Beecke—a tiny structure deformed by a much larger descending linear pattern—is quite different from the more conventional phrase of example 11-2 by Othon-Joseph Vandenbroeck.

---

MEL

mth

i

ANT]...

-----

E

B-----

DESCENDING TRICHORDS

GAP>FILL

EXAMPLE I 1-1. Ignaz (Franz) von Beecke, Symphony in C Minor, Murray Cm] (1795), ii, Siciliana, Larghetto, meas. 1-2

EXAMPLE 11-2. Otho n- Joseph Vandenbroeck, Symphony in E} Major, Brook II, p. 717 (1795), 1, Allegro moderato, meas. 1-4

232

Historical Survey

If Beecke’s phrase represents a fairly large departure from tradition and Vandenbroeck’s hardly any, then the 1—7...4—3 style structures in Haydn’s last two symphonies would appear to fall somewhere in between. Several of Haydn’s techniques have already been discussed in the previous chapter. For example, in the second movement of his Symphony No. 103 we see the now familiar transformation of the two dyads (in the oboe parts) into scalar descending ninths (example 11-3), and in the last movement he uses the x 1—7...4—3 style structure with overlapping voices (example

11-4).

EXAMPLE 11-3. Haydn, Symphony No. 103 in Eb Major, “‘Drumroll”’ (1795), 11, Andante pil tosto allegretto, meas.

117-18

@)—.@

EXAMPLE 11-4. Haydn, Symphony No. 103 in E} Major, “Drumroll” iv, Allegro con spirito, meas. 18-20

(1795),

A Legacy

233

Many of the phrases presented in this chapter are poorly described by such labels as Classic or Romantic. Consider, for example, the phrase from Haydn’s ‘London’? Symphony in example 11-5. On the one hand, the melodic structure of this phrase recalls an earlier stage in the 1—7...4—3 style structure’s history. Compare this melody, for instance, with one by Georg (Anton) Benda, written perhaps in the late 1750s or early 1760s (example 11-6). On the other hand, the plenitude of countermelodies and orchestral forces employed by Haydn is quite characteristic of the early nineteenth century.

1)!

(0)

EXAMPLE 11-5. Haydn, Symphony No. Andante, meas. 42-45

;

er

104 in D Major, “London” (1795), 11,

‘OrO

EXAMPLE I1-6. Georg (Anton) Benda, Symphony No. 4 in F Major (?1760), 1, Allegro, meas. 9—10

234

Historical Survey REVERSAL

ASCENDING LEAPS/ GAP —> FILL

BEFORE CLOSURE

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at

:

Schema theory, as was of course mentioned in chapter 1, already has an established and growing presence in the psychology of music. Both of the most recent books on music cognition treat the subject of musical schemata from several

perspectives.°

The scholar who has most clearly adumbrated my own research is James R. Meehan. As early as 1979 he concluded (as I did independently in 1982) that an analysis of music restricted to tree-structures of pitches might constitute a methodological dead end, and that an alliance of Narmour’s structural categories with the concepts of ‘“‘natural language processing” in computer science, especially Schank and Abelson’s various types of schemata (i.e., scripts and plans), offers a more fruit-

266 —— Historical Survey

ful avenue for further research. In his “An Artificial Intelligence Approach to Tonal Music Theory,”’’ no analyses are presented, nor are the details of his proposals made explicit. I suspect also that he may not realize the various distinctions among Narmour’s categories—there is no mention of style structures or idiostructures, only of style forms. Nevertheless, his trenchant outline of why music theory should move away from outdated models derived from linguistics and toward the more sophisticated and flexible models of current cognitive psychology and artificial intelligence is persuasive. His concluding remark that “what music theory lacks is not the concept of expectations or semantic primitives, but rather the organization and detailed specification of such concepts, which would lead to higher-level information structures and reasonable process models for analysis and composition,”’ calls for the very type of in-depth research provided in the present study. As a contribution to music theory, the present work offers an alternative to the tree-structures that dominate contemporary analysis. Flexible network representations of diverse musical patterns allow the richness and subtlety of musical phrases to be better apprehended, while indications of schema boundaries and events provide simple mid-level parsings. Since I assume that the comprehension of music requires a mix of bottom-up feature recognition and top-down pattern matching, I have made my analytical apparatus, with its dichotomy between higher-level schemata and lower-level features, reflect such a strategy. This approach leads to a more fluid, less systematized view of structural hierarchy in music, a clearer recognition of how analysis can balance its determination of what is normal and what is abnormal, and a

realization that since schemata are the products of experience (hence subject to great change over the centuries), theorists must take a new look at music history. As a contribution to music history, this study opens up two new areas. The first and most obvious 1s the history of specific phrase types. Just as much can be learned of a composer’s style through the way he handles a high-level schema, such as sonata form, so can much be learned from the way he treats a mid-level schema like the 1—7...4—3 style structure. I do not claim to have discovered the phrase as an object of study—eighteenth-century writers themselves discussed musical phrases. But my research establishes an agenda for the study of the phrase that looks beyond the single considerations of size, harmony, form, or melodic contour toward an integrated definition of what constitutes a phrase type. The second new area of study might be called the history of musical schematization—that is, the study of what types of schemata composers used in a particular musical period, where their schemata came from, and which schemata survived into the next period. I am not proposing merely a catalogue of clichés and mannerisms, but rather a consideration of the psychological differentiations among various types of schemata. For example, purely in terms of schemata the claim can be made that while eighteenth-century composers preferred conventional scripts, nineteenthcentury composers favored more open-ended plans. No doubt this dichotomy 1s an oversimplification, yet it could nonetheless provide a point of departure for specific

Conclusions

267

comparisons with the histories of schemata in the other arts (e.g., narrative arche-

types in literature, or visual schemata in painting).

As a final point I want to suggest that the careful study of Classic schemata can result in an analytical description of eighteenth-century music that may qualify as a

“music-producing model,” * to use Jeff Titon’s term. Titon argues that while any

analysis is concerned with enumerating and classifying the individual elements of a music, a production model

must go further and provide

‘‘a set of instructions for

their use.”’ In this study a large set of instructions has been advanced for how to combine the 1—7...4—3 schema with other patterns. Following these instructions, one can in fact produce representative passages of eighteenth-century music. The results are by definition conventional, but then most eighteenth-century music was written not by geniuses but by musical tailors—men who stitched and sewed together swatches woven by others. Perhaps an example is in order. Imagine a young eighteenth-century composer who needs to produce eight stable measures of music to place within a minuet trio. His first task would be to decide which eight-measure schema to use. Let us assume he selects the initial-schema — ascending-process(es) — closing-schema pattern discussed in chapter 9, assigns the 1—7...4—3 schema to the first four measures, and then assigns a long version of Cudworth’s “‘cadence galante”’ to the last four measures. If he were satisfied with the default values of these schemata, then his production would closely resemble what the fifteen-year-old Mozart produced for the trio of his Symphony KV 114 (example 12-1). If, on the other hand, he wished to incorporate a richer network of patterns, then a process of matching and adjustment must ensue. Let us say he wanted to include the high-@ leap, a melodic 5—4—3 descent, the sequential 1—7...4—3...57—6 melodic/harmonic process, and a small gap-fill plan. Given his rather specific knowledge of how these patterns combine—his ‘‘set of instructions for their use’”—he would probably decide on a network like that shown in example 12-2.

(Outer voices only)

“cadence galante”’ ® +

Q

:

q—0

@g—-9

am—>CM

EXAMPLE

9 ——0 CM—am

12-1.

9-16

Mozart, Symphony in A Major, KV

114 (1771), in, Trio, meas.

268

Historical Survey

-eap—

a~aff_=-4

‘XN

fill...

r— sap—

fill—

wa

© {fit riTe----2-

‘ “ie —©=§ =§

oN

T\27T

—-

{ IT

' ' ‘ ! '

~

I

=



@

'

‘ ‘

= = = = = = w= = 4

EXAMPLE

ee

12-2. The basic structure of example 12-1 modified by the incorpora-

tion of a network of additional patterns

Conclusions

269

Like an apprentice tailor, our composer has now stitched together a serviceable frock. It lacks rhythmic decoration, of course, and shows no flair for fashion, but the basic design is solid, and the craftsmanship well in hand. How an eighteenth-century master tailor like Franz Schneider might finish it off is shown in example 12-3.

‘cadence galante” (Outer voices only)

cm—>EbM

| O-g

po

Og

gd Tg

cadence

9

9 EbM—>cm * The embedded two-measure cadence cannily delays the melody’s downbeat tonic until the final measure.

EXAMPLE 12-3. Franz Schneider, Symphony in C Major, Freeman d514 (also attributed to Haydn, Hob. I: Ctl) (before 1777), 11, Trio, meas. 9-16

The conventions of eighteenth-century music ultimately reside in the minds of listeners. While those conventions we fail to recognize cease to exist in any meaningful way, those we can recognize unlock for us experiences shared by generations of musicians and their audiences. If this recognition and sharing of experience can be deepened through the study of musical schemata, then we should be willing to accept all the uncertainties inherent in the study of cognition. We should concern ourselves less with systematizing the elements of music and take a closer look at what the elements of music might be.

APPENDIX

List of Musical Examples Cited or Used in the Statistical Sample All of the musical phrases listed in this appendix fall into one or more of the following three categories: 1. 1-—7...4—3 style structures counted for indicated by asterisks (*) preceding the 2. 1-7...4—3 style structures presented as cated by small circles (°). 3. Other types of musical phrases used as

the statistics of this study. These are entries. examples in the text. These are indiexamples in the text.

The number of a musical example in the text is given in brackets following entries in the second and third categories. Entries in the first category are here given specific, single-year dates, even when the exact year of a composition’s origin is unknown. For example, a composition believed to come from the period 1765-1769 is dated simply as 1767—the midpoint of its presumed time frame. This is done merely to simplify computing the population statistics and in no way represents a “dating” of works 1n the full sense of the word. Properly circumscribed dates are given in the text for those 1-7...4-3 style structures presented only as musical examples. The following abbreviations are used in this appendix: Brook

Brook, Barry S. La symphonie francaise dans la seconde moitié du XVIII’ siécle. 3 vols. Paris: Publications de |’institut de musicologie de |’université de Paris, 1962.

Appendix

Brown, A. Peter. Carlo d’ Ordonez (1734—1786): A Thematic Catalogue. Detroit: Detroit Studies in Music Bibliography, 1978. Bryan, Paul R. The Symphonies of Johann Vanhal. Ph.D.

Brown

Bryan DDT

dissertation, University of Michigan,

1955.

schichtlichen

Breitkopf

Mayer-Reinach, Albert, ed. Montezuma. Denkmiler Deutscher Tonkunst. Herausgegeben von der MusikgeKommission.

1892-—1931.

DTO

Horwitz,

Karl,

and

Vienna: Artaria,

G Hill

mus.

Jenkins/Churgin Krebs MAB Murray

Strohm

WV

eds.

Wiener

Hartel,

Instrumen-

1894-.

of Florian

Leopold

Gassmann.

Hackensack,

Joseph Boonin, 1976. Hortus musicus. Kassel: Barenreiter, 1936-. Lampugnani,

Giovanni Battista, L’amor contadino.

N.J.:

Italian

Opera 1640-1770, selected and arranged by Howard Mayer Brown.

New York: Garland Publishing,

1978.

Jenkins, Newell, and Bathia Churgin. Thematic Catalogue of the Works of Giovanni Battista Sammartini. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976. Krebs, Carl. Dittersdorfiana. Berlin: Gebriider Paetel, 1900. Musica antiqua bohemica. Prague. Murray, Sterling E., ed. Seven Symphonies from the Court of Oettingen-Wallerstein, 1773-1795. The Symphony, 1720-1840,

Wq

Riedel,

&

Freeman, Robert N. Franz Schneider (1737-1812): A Thematic Catalogue of His Works. New York: Pendragon, 1979. Gérard, Yves. Thematic, Bibliographical, and Critical Catalogue of the Works of Luigi Boccherini. London: Oxford University Press, 1969. Hill, George R. A Thematic Catalog of the Instrumental

Music

It. Op.

Karl

Leipzig:

talmusik vor und um 1750, I. Denkmdaler der Tonkunst in Osterreich, edited by Guido Adler, vol. 31 (Jahrgang 15,2).

Freeman

Hort.

271

series C, vol. 6. New

York: Garland Publish-

ing, 1981. Strohm, Reinhard, [talienische Opernarien des friihen Settecento (1720—1730). Cologne: Arno Volk Verlag, 1976. Wotquenne, Alfred. Thematisches Verzeichnis der Werke von Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach. Leipzig: Breitkopf & Hartel, 1905. Scholz-Michelitsch, H. Das Orchester- und Kammermusikwerk von G. C. Wagenseil: thematischer Katalog. Vienna, 1972.

*

272

Appendix

Albrechtsberger, Johann Georg, Symphony in D Major (1770), 1, meas. 13-15 , Symphony in D Major (1770), iii, meas. 1-3 [fig. 3-9]

x

*+

€+

F

*

Arban, Jean-Baptiste, Fantasie and Variations (1864), piano ritornello [11-45]

°

° * * *

°% * * °%

°%

o% o%

°% °

on

“The

Carnival

Bach,

Carl Philipp Emanuel, 3d Orchestral Symphony in F (1776), 1, meas. 28—29 , 3d Orchestral Symphony in F Major, Wq 183 (1776), , 3d Orchestral Symphony in‘F Major, Wq 183 (1776), , 3d Orchestral Symphony in F Major, Wq 183 (1776), Bach, Johann Christian, Symphony in G Minor, Op. 6, No. 6 33-34 Bach, Johann Sebastian, The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I, Eb Minor (1722), meas. 1—4 [7-23] , [The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I, Prelude No. 13 in

of Venice”

Major, Wq

183

1, meas. 38—39 1, meas. 74-75 il1, meas. 60-63 (1770), i, meas. Prelude No. 8 in F# Major (1722),

meas. 2]1—24 [7-27]

, [The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II, Prelude No. 7 in Eb Major (71744),

meas. 1—4 [7-31] , [he Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II, Prelude No. 7 in Eb Major (71744), meas. 57—65 [7-32]

, The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II, Fugue No. 12 in F Minor (71744), meas. 1—4 [7-29] Barthélemon, Francois-Hippolyte, Symphony in D Major, Op. 3, No. 2, Brook II, p. 58 (1774), 1, meas. 2-4

, symphony in F Minor, Op. 3, No. 5, Brook II, p. 58 (1775), 1, meas.

Becks, Ienaz (Franz) von, Symphony in C Minor, Murray Cm1

Symphony in C Minor, Murray Cm1 Beethoven,

(1795), 1, meas.

(1795), ii, Siciliana, meas.

1-2

Ludwig van, Symphony No. | in C Major, Op. 21 (1800), 11, meas.

symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 36 (1801), 1, meas. 12-14 , Symphony No. 6 in F Major, Op. 68, “Pastorale’’ (1808), 111, meas. 181—84 [11-18] , Symphony No. 6 in F Major, Op. 68, “Pastorale’’ (1808), 1v, meas. 21-29 [11-25]

, Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92 (1812), i, meas. 201-12 [11-26]

, Symphony No. 8 in F Major, Op. 93 (1812), 1, meas. 1-8 [11-36] , Piano Concerto No. 5 in Eb Major, “Emperor,” Op. 73 (1809), ii, meas.

16—20

[11-22]

'

, String Quartet in C# Minor, Op. 131, No. 4 (1826), iv, meas. 1-4 [11-40] , String Quartet in A Minor, Op. 132 (1825), 1, meas. 13—20 [11-39]

Appendix

Beethoven, Ludwig van (continued), Piano Sonata in F Major, Op. °

(1796-97),

1, meas.

19—26 [5-9]

, Piano Sonata in D Major, Op. 1-8 [5-23] , Piano Sonata in D Major, Op.

° °

°

° °

°

273

10, No. 2

10, No. 3 (1797-98), iii, Trio, meas. 10, No. 3 (1797-98),

iv, meas. 35-37

[1-1, 5-37] , Piano Sonata in Eb Major, Op. 27, No. | (1800-1801), i, meas. 37-40 [5-30] , Piano Sonata in Eb Major, Op. 27, No.

[5-40]

1 (1800-1801), ii, meas. 9-12

, Piano Sonata in Cf# Minor, “‘Moonlight,” Op. 27, No. 2 (1801), ii, meas. 1—8 [5-19] , Piano Sonata in D Major, ‘‘Pastoral,’’ Op. 28 (1801), i, meas. 138-40

[5-5a] , Piano Sonata in D Minor, “Tempest,” Op. 31, No. 2 (1802), ii, meas. 1-5 [5-33a] , Piano Sonata in E> Major, Op. 31, No. 3 (1802), iii, meas.

1—4 [5-13]

, Piano Sonata in C Major, ““Waldstein,” Op. 53 (1803-04), iii, meas. 14 [5-26] , Piano Sonata in Eb Major, “‘Lebewohl,”’ Op. 81a (1809-10), iii, meas.

53-54 [5-35] °

, Piano Sonata in E Minor, Op. 90 (1814), 11, meas. 9-10 [5-38] , Piano Sonata in C Minor, Op. 111 (1821-22), 1, meas. 50-54 11-37a]

[5-12,

°* Benda, Georg (Anton), Symphony in F Major, MAB No. 4 (1760), 1, meas. 9-10 [11-6] °* Berlioz, Hector, Symphonie fantastique, Op. 14 (1830), i, meas. 72-86 [11-14] °* Berwald, Franz, Estrella de Soria (1841), Polonaise, 2d theme (transcribed from Nonesuch H71218) [11-31b]

°* Boccherini, Luigi, Symphony in D Major, Op. 42, G520 (1789), 1, meas. [10-12, 11-37b] * Boyce, William, Symphony No. 2 in A Major (1760), i, meas. 45-47 Brahms, Johannes, Symphony No. | in C Minor, Op. 68 (1876), i1, meas.

°*

(fig. 3-7] , Intermezzo in B Minor, Op.

119, No.

°* Bréval, Jean-Baptiste Sébastien, Symphonie Brook III, p. 188 (1795), 1, meas.

1 (1892), meas. 24—31

1—4

1-9

[11-35b]

concertante in F Major, Op. 38,

142—45

[11-7]

, Symphonie concertante in F Major, Op. 38, Brook III, p. 208 (?1795),

il, meas. 54—57

*

[10-45]

, Symphonie concertante in F Major, Op. 38 (71795), 111, Rondeau, meas. 73-77 [2-n.18] , Symphonie concertante in F Major, Brook III, p. 215 (1795), i, Rondeau, meas. 328-49

274

Appendix

** Cambini, Giuseppe Maria, Symphonie concertante No. 6 in F Major, Brook II, p. 144 (1776), 1, meas. 1-4 [8-20b] *K , Symphonie concertante in C Major, Brook II, p. 161 (1780), i, meas. 1-4 ° , Symphony in D Major, Op. 5, No. 1 (1776), ii, meas. 17-20 [9-58, 9-60] °* Cardon, Jean-Guillain (le pére), Symphony in Bb Major, Op. 10, No. 2, Brook II, p. 177 (1772), 1, meas. 1—4°[9-23] * Cherubini, Luigi, Symphony in D Major (1815), i, meas. 153-54 , symphony in D Major (1815), iv, meas. 34—40 [11-24] °* , String Quartet in Eb Major (1814), i, meas. 1—4 [11-19] ° Clementi, Muzio, Piano Sonata, Op. 10, No. 1 (1783), ii, Trio, meas. 1—4 [11-38] Corelli, Arcangelo, Trio Sonata, Op. 3, No. 2 (1689), Allegro, meas. 95—96

[7-3]

°* Dittersdorf, Carl Ditters von, Symphony in C Major, Krebs 1 (1766), i, meas. 1-4 [8-16] °* Donizetti, Gaetano, Torquato Tasso (1833), meas. suoi bei carmi” [11-44]

1—4 of the aria “Io l’udia ne

Dvorak, Antonin, Symphony No. 9 in E Minor, “From the New World,” Op. 95

*

ok

(1893), iv, meas.

10-12 [fig. 3-8]

Eberl, Anton, Symphony in E> Major, Op. 33 (1804), 1, meas. 158-59

, Piano Sextet (Cl. and Hn.), Op. 47 (1800), iii, meas. 1 [11-17] |

°* Fiala, Joseph, Symphony in C Major, Murray C1 (1775), ii, meas. 60-65 [11-8] °% , Symphony in C Major, Murray Cl (1775), iv, meas. 31-34 [9-6]

oF *

oF

, Symphony in F Major, Murray F1 (1776), i, meas. 1-2 [9-13]

Froberger, Johann Jakob, Suite meas. 6—7 [6-la, 7-2]

Gassmann, Florian Leopold, meas. 14-16

, Symphony in E} , Symphony in Eb Ox , Symphony in Eb °* Gossec, Francois Joseph, 40-44 [8-25] * , Symphony in G °%* * * ok

om

3 for Harpsichord

Symphony

(71649), .

in C Minor, Hill No.

Allemande,

23 (1765), u,

, Symphony in C Minor, Hill No. 23 (1765), iv, meas. 37—40 [8-20a]

o% *

°

No.

Major, Hill No. Major, Hill No. Major, Hill No. Symphony in G

1, meas. iv, meas. iv, meas. 12, No. 2

19—20 [8-23] 33—35 1—2 [8-22] (1766), 11, meas.

Major, Op. 12, No. 2 (1766), ti, meas. 51-54

Graun, Carl Heinrich, Montezuma



26 (1765), 26 (1765), 85 (1769), Major, Op.

(1755), Sinfonia, i, meas. 7—9 [8-n.2]

, Montezuma (1755), Sinfonia, 1, meas. 44—46 [8-1] , Montezuma (1755), Sinfonia, i, meas. 65—67 , Montezuma (1755), Sinfonia, tii, meas. 17-19 , Montezuma (1755), Aria di Narvés, DDT, p. 54, meas. 1-3 [8-n.3] , Montezuma (1755), Aria di Narvés, DDT, p. 54, meas. 8—10 [8-4]

, Montezuma (1755), Aria di Eupaforice, DDT, p. 156, meas. 21-24 [8-6]

°* Graun,

Carl

Heinrich

(continued),

Trio

Sonata

Appendix

275

Hort.

mus.

211

13, Un poco adagio, meas.

1—8

in Eb

Major,

(1750), ii, meas. 1—2 [7-17] °* Haydn, Franz Josef, Mass No. 6, Missa Cellensis (Mariazellermesse) (1782), Ox * Ox

* * * * ° * °%*

Sanctus, meas. 1—4 [10-2] , Orlando Palladino (1782),

[10-26]

Aria No.

, Orlando Palladino (1782), Aria No. 26, Presto, meas. 1—4 , symphony B in B> Major, Hob. I: 108 (1759), ii, meas. 7—8

, , , , , , ,

symphony symphony symphony symphony symphony symphony symphony

No. No. No. No. No. No. No.

, symphony No.

°* °% * °* *

, symphony No. 20 in C Major (1760), ii, meas.

* * * *

ok * o% °>

os oF * *

om

°* * *

oF

, Symphony , symphony meas. 12-14 , symphony , symphony , symphony

No. No. No. No. No.

12 in E Major (1763), 11, meas. 34—36

, , , , ,

° 7% *

symphony symphony symphony symphony symphony

12 14 15 17 19

in in in in in

E A D F D

Major Major Major Major Major

(1763), (1764), (1761), (1761), (1759),

111, meas. 38—39 111, Trio, meas. 29—32 [2-23] i, meas. 37—38 [8-7a] i11, meas. 9-12 i, meas. 42 [8-7b] 19-22

No. 20 in C Major (1760), iv, meas. 45-48 [8-12] No. 22 in E> Major, “The Philosopher” (1764), Alternate ii, No. 24 in D Major (1764), iv, meas. 21-22 No. 25 in C Major (1761), 1, meas. 156-57 No. 26 in D Minor, ‘‘Lamentatione”’ (1770); i1, meas. 9-11

, Symphony No. 30 in C Major, “Alleluja’” (1765), inl, meas.

, symphony [8-14] , symphony , Symphony [9-34a] , Symphony

[8-8]

1 in D Major (1759), ii, meas. 1—3 3 in G Major (1762), iv, meas. 39—42 6 in D Major, “‘Le matin” (1761), ii, meas. 17—20 7 in C Major, “Le midi” (1761), 1, meas. 55 7 in C Major, ““Le midi” (1761), 1, meas. 121—24 [8-11] 7 in C Major, “Le midi” (1761), ii, meas. 3 12 in E Major (1763), ii, meas. 1—5 [8-28]

12-14

No. 31 in D Major, “Hornsignal”’ (1765), 1, meas. 27—28

No. 31 in D Major, ‘“Hornsignal”’ (1765), 1, meas. 93-94 No. 31 in D Major, ‘“‘Hornsignal” (1765), iii, meas. 1-8 No. 32 in C Major (1760), i, meas. 161—64 [8-13]

, Symphony No. 32 in C Major (1760), ii, Trio, meas. 1—4 [8-19] , Symphony No. 35 in Bb Major (1767), i, meas. 17—20 [8-15] , Symphony No. 36 in Eb Major (1763), iv, meas. 17-18 , Symphony No. 38 in C Major (1769), iv, meas. 43—45

, Symphony No. 41 in C Major (1770), i, meas. 1—8 [9-34b]

, Symphony No. 42 , Symphony No. 42 , Symphony No. 42 , Symphony No. 43

in in in in

D D D Eb

Major Major Major Major,

(1771), i, meas. 9-12 [9-33] (1771), iil, meas. 41-42 (1771), iv, meas. 65-75 ““Mercury” (1772), 1, meas. 1—4 [9-37]

276

Appendix

Haydn, Franz Josef (continued), Symphony No. 43 in Eb Major, (1772), iv, meas.

“‘Mercury”

1-5

, symphony No. 44 in E Minor, “Trauersinfonie” (1772), i, meas. 5-8 , symphony No. 45 in F¢ Minor, “Farewell” (1772), ii, meas. 21 —24 [9-7] , symphony

No.

45

in FR Minor,

“Farewell’’

(1772),

iii, Trio,

meas.

65-68 [9-9] , symphony No. 45 in Ff Minor, “Farewell” (1772), iv, meas. 2—3 , symphony No. 51 in Bb Major (1774), 11, meas. 5—7 , symphony No. 51 in B> Major (1774), iv, meas.

13-15

, symphony No. 51 in Bb Major (1774), iv, meas. 17—20

%*¥

*+

4+

*&€

*&©

%&¥

FF

, symphony

Ox O x

0 Ox

O O

, symphony 42—45 [9-38] , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony meas. 94-97 , symphony (2-16, 9-26] , symphony , Symphony , Symphony [10-13] , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony

No. 51 in Bb Major (1774), iv, meas. 33-37

No. 53 in D Major, “Imperial” (1778), iv (version B), meas. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.

54 54 56 60 61 61 61 61 63

in in in in in in in in in

G G C C D D D D C

Major (1774), 1, meas. 21-24 [9-40] Major (1774), i1, meas. 27—28 Major (1774), 1, meas. 53-56 Major, “Il distratto”’ (1774), v, meas. 1—4 Major (1776), 11, meas. 1—2 Major (1776), 11, meas. 100-104 Major (1776), ii, meas. 1-5 Major (1776), iv, meas. 1—3 Major, “La Roxelane”’ (1779), iv (version 1), . No. 69 in C Major, “Laudon” (1776), iv, meas. 27-30

No. 71 in Bb Major (1779), iv, meas. 11-14 [9-41] No. 72 in D Major (1764), 11, meas. | No. 73 in D Major, *“‘La chasse”’ (1781), 1, meas. 29-30 No. No. No. No.

74 75 76 80

in in in in

Eb D E> D

Major Major Major Minor

(1780), (1779), (1782), (1784),

11, meas. 2—3 [10-6] 1, meas. 1—6 [10-23] 11, meas. 81-84 iv, meas. 111-17

, symphony No. 81 in G Major (1784), 1, meas. 28-31

, Symphony , Symphony , Symphony [10-10] , Symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony , symphony

[10-19,

11-42b]

No. 84 in Eb Major (1786), iv, meas. 120-23 No. 85 in Bb Major, “*La reine” (1785), iv, meas. 9— 10 [10-9] No. 85 in Bb Major, “‘La reine” (1785), iv, meas. 25-28 No. No. No. No. No.

87 88 88 89 90

in in in in in

A G G F C

Major Major Major Major Major

(1785), (1787), (1787), (1787), (1788),

iv, meas. 28-31 11, meas. 1—4 [10-28] iv, meas. 37—38 1, meas. 15—16 [10-1 la] iv, meas. 54-56

Appendix

277

*

%%*%

+

°* Haydn, Franz Josef (continued), Symphony No. 93 in D Major (1791), i, meas. 120-22 [10-8] Ox , symphony No. 94 in G Major, “The Surprise”’ (1791), iii, meas. 1-8 [10-24a] , Symphony No. 94 in G Major, ‘The Surprise” (1791), iv, meas. 45-46 , symphony No. 95 in C Minor (1791), i, meas. 6—9 , symphony No. 95 in C Minor (1791), ii, meas. 8—9 , symphony No. 96 in D Major, “The Miracle” (1791), i, meas. 14-18 , symphony No. 96 in D Major, ““The Miracle” (1791), ii, meas. 2—3 [10-20] , symphony No. 97 in C Major (1792), iv, meas. 3—4 [10-2Sa] , symphony No. 98 in Bb Major (1792), i, meas. 109-12 , symphony No. 98 in Bb Major (1792), iv, meas. 45—48 [10-14] , symphony No. 99 in Eb Major (1793), i, meas. 3 , symphony No. 99 in E> Major (1793), iii, meas. 1—8 [10-15] , symphony No. 99 in Eb Major (1793), iv, meas. 173-76 , symphony No. 100 in G Major, *“‘Military” (1794), iv, meas. 125—28 [10-29] , symphony No. 101 in D Major, ““The Clock” (1794), i, meas. 27—28 , Symphony No. 101 in D Major, *“*The Clock” (1794), i, meas. 81-84 [10-n.1] , symphony No. 102 in Bb Major (1794), 1, meas. 43—44 , symphony No. 102 in Bb Major (1794), iv, meas. 71-72 , symphony No. 103 in Eb Major, ‘““Drumroll’’ (1795), ii, meas. 117-18 [11-3] , symphony No. 103 in Eb Major, ““Drumroll” (1795), iv, meas. 18—20 [11-4] , Symphony No. 104 in D Major, “London” (1795), 11, meas. 42—45 [11-5] , Overture in D Major, Hob. Ia:4 (1783), 1, meas. 1—4 [5-21] , Violin Concerto in C Major, Hob. VIIa: 1 (1765), 1, meas. 3-4 , Violin Concerto in C Major, Hob. VIfa: 1 (1765), 111, meas. 29-31

O

, Violin Concerto in C Major, Hob. Vila: 1 (1765), 111, meas. 204-7 , Violoncello Concerto No. 1 in C Major, Hob. VIIb: 1 (1763), 1, meas. | , Violoncello Concerto No. | in C Major, Hob. VIIb:1 (1763), 1, meas. 27-28 , string Quartet in Eb Major, Op. 33, No. 2 (1781), i, meas. 21-24 [9-15] , String Quartet in Bb Major, Op. 55, No. 3 (1789), 1, meas. 1—4 [11-16] , String Quartet in G Major, Op. 64, No. 4, Hob. III: 66 (1790), 1, meas. 1-3 , Keyboard Trio in F Major, Hob. XV: 17 (1790), i, meas. 54-56 , Keyboard Sonata in Bb Major, Hob. XV1I/2 (—?:760), ti, meas.

[5-15a]

1-4

278 °

° °

° ° ° °

Appendix Haydn,

Franz

Josef (continued),

° ° °

° ° ° ° ° °

©

Sonata

Major,

Hob.

XVI/4

Sonata in C Major,

Hob.

XVI/21

(—?1765),

, Keyboard

Sonata in D Major,

Hob.

XVI/24

(21773),

, Keyboard

Sonata

, Keyboard

Sonata in G Major,

i, meas.

1—4

[5-31] , Keyboard Sonata in F Major, Hob. XVI/23 (1773), i, meas. 12-15 (5-6b] . , Keyboard Sonata in F Major, Hob. X VI/23 (1773), 1, meas. 61—64 [5-7] , Keyboard Sonata in F Major, Hob. X VI/23 (1773), 111, meas. 1—4 [5-3]

[5-15b]

in G

Major,

Hob. Hob.

XVI/27 XVI/27

(21776), (?1776),

ii, meas. ii, meas. iii, meas.

9-12 1—2 1—4,

25— 28, 49-52, 81-84, 105-8, 113-16 [5-1] , Keyboard Sonata in C Major, Hob. XVI/35 (—1780), ii, meas. 1-2 [5-16] , Keyboard Sonata in C# Minor, Hob. XVI/36 (?c1770—75), 11, meas. 17-18 [5-22] , Keyboard Sonata in D Major, Hob. X VI/37 (— 1780), 111, meas. 1—4 [5-2]

, Keyboard Sonata in Eb Major, Hob. XVI/38 (— 1780), 11, meas. 1-2 [5-8a] , Keyboard Sonata in Eb Major, Hob. XVI/38 (— 1780), 11, meas. 5-6 [5-8b] , Keyboard Sonata in G Major, Hob. XVI/39 (— 1780), 11, meas. 8-11 [5-15c]

, Keyboard [5-4b] , Keyboard 9—10 [5-6a] , Keyboard 13-14 [5-25] , Keyboard 81-84 [5-4c] , Keyboard 84—85 [5-36] , Keyboard , Keyboard

Sonata in Bb Major, Hob. XVI/41 (—1784), 1, meas. 8-11 Sonata in Ab Major,

Hob.

Sonata

in Eb Major,

Hob.

Sonata

in Eb Major,

Sonata

in Eb Major,

XVI/46

(c1767—70),

1, meas.

XVI/49

(1789-90),

1, meas.

Hob.

XVI/49

(1789-90),

1, meas.

Hob.

XVI/49

(1789-90),

1, meas.

Sonata in Eb Major, Hob. XVI/52 (1794), t1, meas. 3 [5-34] Sonata No. 18 in Eb Major in Wiener Urtext Ed. (2c1764), 1,

meas. 23—24 [5-5b] °* Henselt, Adolf, Concerto for Piano in F Minor, Op.

*

in D

(S-4a] , Keyboard

[5-27]

°

Keyboard

(?c1765), 11, meas. 1—4 [5-11] —(?), Keyboard Sonata in A Major, Hob. XVI/5 (— 1763), i, meas. 38-41

16 (1838), i, meas.

12—14

{11-30a] Lampugnani, Giovanni Battista, L’amor contadino, It. Op., p. 30, meas. 4—5 (1760), Aria di Clorideo

Appendix

279

* Leo, Leonardo, Lucio Papirio (1737), Overture, i, meas. 5—6

°* Mahler, Gustav, Symphony No. 4 (1899), iii, meas. 17—21 [11-41] °* Massonneau, Louis, Symphony in E> Major, Op. 3, Book 1 (1792), i, meas. 1-4 [9-16] ox , Symphony in Eb Major, Op. 3, Book | (1792), i, meas. 19-22 [2-24] °* Méhul,

Etienne-Nicolas,

Symphony

No.

| in G Minor

(1809),

i, meas.

1-8

[11-10] * Mendelssohn, Felix, String Symphony No. 8 in D Major (1822), iv, meas. 25-29 °* , String Symphony No. 11 in F Minor (1823), i, meas. 68—76 [11-13]

** , String Symphony No. 11 in F Minor (1823), iv, meas. 1-2 © 3 , Octet (1825), 11, meas. 1-9 [11-23] °* Mercadante, Saverio, Clarinet Concerto in Bb Major (1819), 1, meas. 1—8 [11-12]

* Monn, Matthias Georg, Symphony in D Major, DTO (1740), ii, meas. 51-54

°* , Symphony in B Major, DTO (71742), ii, meas. 9 [7-19] * Mozart, Leopold, Symphony in G Major, No. 2, “Sinfonia burlesca”’ (1753), i, meas. 62-64 °* Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, Don Giovanni (1787), Act1, No. 12, Aria di Zerlina, ‘Batti, batti,’’ meas. 1—4 [10-16] ° , Don Giovanni (1787), Act I, No. 12, Aria di Zerlina, “‘Batti, batti,”’ meas. 9-12, 45—48 [10-18] , Don Giovanni (1787), Act I, Finale, meas. 218—19 [2-25]

o* * °% *

* °% * °* * °% °%

, La finta giardiniera, KV 121 (207a) (1774), Overture, iii, meas. 21-24 [9-3, 9-44] , Symphony in Bb Major, KV 22 (1765), i1, meas. 32-35 , Symphony in F Major, KV 43 (1767), ii, meas. 1—4 [8-18] , Symphony in C Major, KV 73 (1772), iv, meas.

, Symphony in , Symphony in , Symphony in , Symphony in 5-28, 8-17, 9-la, , Symphony in , Symphony in , Symphony in

D Major, KV F Major, KV A Major, KV A Major, KV 12-1] A Major, KV A Major, KV G Major, KV

, symphony in G Major, KV

°* *

o% om oF *

°* *

107-10

84 (73q) (1770), ili, meas. 159-61 112 (1771), iv, meas. 17—20 [10-37] 114 (1771), 1, meas. 48-50 114 (1771), iii, Trio, meas. 9-12 [4-11], 114 (1771), iv, meas. 16—20 114 (1771), iv, meas. 82—88 [7-22, 9-36] 124 (1772), ii, meas. J} 1-12 [4-9, 9-5] 124 (1772), 11, meas. 43—44 [4-10]

, symphony in C Major, KV 128 (1772), in, Finale, meas. 12—13 [7-n.3]

, Symphony in G Major, KV 129 (1772), ili, meas. 46-49 [9-21] , Symphony in F Major, KV 130 (1772), 11, meas. 5-6

, Symphony in E> Major, KV 132 (1772), ii, meas. 8-9 [9-12] , Symphony in A Major, KV 134 (1772), i, meas. 1—4 [9-27a] , Symphony in C Major, KV 162 (1773), ili, meas. 7—9 [9-14c] , Symphony

in Bb Major, KV

182 (173dA) (1773), ii, meas. 28—29

, Symphony in G Minor, KV 183 (173dB) (1773), 1, meas. 29-32 [10-39a] , Symphony in G Minor, KV 183 (173dB) (1773), 11, meas. 17—18

280 *

Appendix Mozart,

Wolfgang

Amadeus

(continued),

(161a) (1773), il, meas. 3-4

Ox

O% O x O

, symphony

Symphony

in

Eb

Major,

in C Major, KV 200 (189k) (1773), ii, meas.

KV

184

1—4 [9-55]

, symphony in C Major, KV 200 (189k) (1773), ii, meas. 11—14 [9-51] , symphony in A Major, KV 201 (186a) (1774), iv, meas. 1—4 [9-27b, 10-40] , symphony in D Major, KV 202 (186b) (1774), i, meas. 19—20 [9-28a] , serenade in D Major, KV 204 (213a) (1775), ti, meas. 23-24 , serenade in D Major, KV 204 (213a) (1775), iv, meas. 54—57

[9-28b]

, serenade in D Major, “‘Haffner,” KV 250 (248b) (1776), ii, meas. 19-21 [9-14a] , symphony in D Major, “Paris,” KV 297 (300a) (1778), 1, meas. 33-34 , Symphony in B> Major, KV 319 (1779), iv, meas. 208-9 , serenade in D Major, “Posthorn,” KV 320 (1779), i, meas. 46—49 (2-17, 9-29] , serenade in D Major, “‘Posthorn,’” KV 320 (1779), 1, meas. 54-57, 197-200, 205-8 [8-20c, 9-30, 9-31, 9-32, 11-42a] , serenade in D Major, *‘Posthorn,” KV 320 (1779), v, meas. 1—4 , serenade in D Major, “Posthorn,’’ KV 320 (1779), v, meas.

, serenade in D , symphony in , Symphony in [10-39b] , symphony in , symphony in , symphony in , symphony in , symphony in , Symphony in , symphony in

1 —6 [9-43]

Major, *“‘Posthorn,” KV 320 (1779), v, meas. 38—39 C Major, KV 338 (1780), il, meas. 154-56 D Major, “‘Haffner,’’ KV 385 (1782), 1, meas. 117-21 C D D Eb E> G G

Major, Major, Major, Major, Major, Minor, Minor,

“Linz,” KV 425 (1783), 11, meas. 96 [10-1] ‘“‘Prague,’’ KV 504 (1786), 11, meas. 97-99 “Prague,’’ KV 504 (1786), 11, meas. 59-60 KV 543 (1788), 1, meas. 26—33 [10-27] KV 543 (1788), 1, meas. 84—85 KV 550 (1788), i, meas. 184-91 [10-30] KV 550 (1788), 11, meas. 20—23 [10-35]

, symphony in G Minor, KV 550 (1788), 11, meas. 71-72

, symphony in G Minor, KV 550 (1788), 1, meas. 86—89 [10-36] , symphony in G Minor, KV 550 (1788), 111, meas. 28-31 , symphony in C Major, “‘Jupiter,””» KV 551 (1788), iv, meas. 190-91

, Piano Concerto in Eb Major, “Jeunehomme,” KV 271 (1777), 11, meas. 237—40 [10-17a] , Piano Concerto in A Major, KV 488 (1786), 1, meas. 71-72 [10-41] , string Quartet in G Major, KV 387 (1782), 1, meas. 68—72 [5-32]

, Fugue in G Minor, KV 401 (375e) (1782), meas. 1-3

, Keyboard Sonata in F Major, KV A135 (547a) (71788), 1, meas.

17-24

[5-17] , Keyboard Sonata in G Major, KV 283 (189h) (1775), 1, meas.

2-10, 2-11, 2-14, 4-12, 5-29, 9-22]

1—4 [2-9,

Appendix °

Oo

O*

Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (continued), Keyboard Sonata in C Major, KV 309 (284b) (1777), 11, meas. 33-36, 53-56 [5-14] , Keyboard Sonata in Bb Major, KV

333 (315c) (1778), i, meas.

& + + x¥ oO

11-14

[4-15] , Keyboard Sonata in C Minor, KV 457 (1784), iii, meas. 1—4 [4-13] Miller, A. E. (?), once attributed to Mozart as KV° 498a (1786), Keyboard Sonata in Bb Major, iv, meas. 110-13 [5-18] Ordonez, Carlo d’, Symphony in C Major, Brown I:C1 (71753), iii, meas. 8 [7-21] , symphony in C Major, Brown I:Cl (71753), ili, meas. 14-15 , symphony in C Major, Brown I:C9 (1773), i, meas. 55—58 , Symphony in C Major, Brown [:C9 (1773), iii, Finale, meas. 101-3 [9-14b] , symphony in C Major, Brown I:C14 (1775), 1, meas. 21-22 , Symphony in E Major, Brown [:E2 (n.d.), 1, meas.

Ox

281

1-4 [9-4]

, symphony in F Major, Brown I: F11 (1767), ii, meas. 17-18 , symphony in F Minor, Brown |: F12(min) (1773), i, meas. 1—6 [10-46] , Symphony in G Minor, Brown I:G8(min) (1773), i, meas. 1-4 , symphony in A Major, Brown I: A8 (1765), ii, meas. 1—4 , symphony in Bb Major, Brown I: Bb4 (1778), 1, meas. 39-40 , symphony in Bb Major, Brown I[: Bb4 (1778), ii, meas. 9-12 Orlandini, Giuseppe Maria, Ormisda, Strohm, ex. 101 (1722), meas. 21 —22 [7-4] Pleyel, Ignaz, piano arrangement by Hummel (1789) of Benson No. 432, iii, meas. 97-100 [3-4]

O %

© *

ox

Pollarolo, Antomio, Lucio Papirio dittatore, Strohm, ex. 102 (1721), meas. 5053 [7-5] Ponchielli, Amilcare, La Gioconda (1876), Theme of the Daylight Hours (meas. 22—25 of Entrance of the Evening Hours) [11-46] Poulenc, Francis, Flute Sonata (1956), 1, meas. 5—7 [6-1b] Ragué, Louis-Charles, Symphony in D Minor, Op. 10, No. 1, Brook III, p. 109 (1786), 1, meas.

1—6 [10-22]

(1785), 1, meas.

1—4 [10-21]

, symphony in D Minor, Op. 10, No. 1, Brook III, p. 119 (1786), 1, meas. 111-14 O* , Symphony in D Minor, Op. 10, No. 1, Brook III. pp. 128-29 (1786), lll, meas. 20—24 [10-44] 0 x Rigel, Henri-Joseph, Symphony in D Minor, Op. 21, No. 2, Brook III, p. 86 *

*

Rosetti, Antonio, Symphony in D Major, Murray D3 (1788), iv, meas. 44-47 Ox , Symphony in Eb Major, Murray E}1 (1776), 1, meas. 1-5 [9-42] *K , Symphony in F Major, Murray F1 (1776), 1, meas. 44-47 *K , Symphony in F Major, Murray F1 (1776), 1, meas. 73-75 © Rossini, Gioachino, String Sonata No. 2 in A Major (1804), 1, meas. 17-22 [11-9]

282

Appendix

*K

Rossini, Gioachino (continued), meas. 131-39

*

Rubinstein, Anton, Piano Concerto No. 4 in D Minor, Op. 70 (1864), ii, meas.

o

*K O * *

*

String Sonata No.

5 in Eb Major (1804), i,

13-16 , Piano Concerto No. 4 in D Minor, Op. 70 (1864), ii, meas. 65-72 [11-43] Ruge, Filipo, Symphony in D Major, Brook III, p. 42 (1757), i, meas. 83 , symphony in D Major, Brook II], p. 49 (1757), iii, meas. 44-47 [8-27] Saint-Georges, Chevalier de, Symphonie concertante in G Major, Op. 13, Brook III, p. 149 (1782), 1, meas. 37-42 , Symphonie concertante in G Major, Op. 13, Brook III, pp. 151- 52

(1782), 1, meas. 9S5—100 O% Sammartini, Giovanni Battista, Symphony

in D Major, Jenkins/Churgin No. 14 (1739), 1, meas. 29-36 [7-10] Ox*x , symphony in G Major, Jenkins/Churgin No. 39 (1740), 1, meas. 4—5 [7-24c] Ox Scarlatti, Domenico, Narciso (1720), Overture, 1, meas. 98—100 [7-1] Ox Schneider, Franz, Symphony in C Major, Freeman d514 (1777) (also attributed to Haydn, Hob. I:C11), 11, Trio, meas. 9—12 [12-3] © x Schubert, Franz, Symphony No. 1 in D Major, D82 (1813), 1, meas. 1-8 [11-n.2] 0 O 0

, symphony No. 1 in D Major, D82 (1813), 11, meas. 34-37 [4-n.3]

, symphony No. 5 in Bb Major, D485 (1816), 1, meas. 5— 12 (5-20, 11-n.2] , Piano Quintet in A Major, “‘The Trout,’’ D667 (1819), v, meas. 195—98

[9-17] , Wanderer Fantasy, D760 (1822), meas. 161-65 [11-20a]

°

, Das Wandern,” Die schéne Miillerin, No. 1 (1823), meas. 5—6[11-20b] Ox Schumann, Robert, Symphony No. 1 in Bb Major, “Spring” (1841), ii, meas. *

0

0 O

x

© x © x

55-58 [11-34a] , , symphony No. 2 in C Major (1845), 1v, meas. 221-26

, symphony No. 2 in C Major (1845), iv, meas. 237—41 [11-34b] , symphony No. 3 in Eb Major, “Rhenish’’ (1850), v, meas. 27-30

[11-33] , symphony No. 3 in Eb Major, “Rhenish” (1850), v, meas. 47—48 [11-32] , symphony No. 4 in D Minor (1841), 111, meas. 25—28 , Piano Sonata, Op.

11 (1832-35), Scherzo, meas.

1—8 [5-10]

, Faschingsschwank aus Wien, No. | (1839-40), meas. 1-8 [5-24] , Liederkreis, Op. 39 (1840), No. 9, ““Wehmut,”’ meas. 14-17 [2-12, 2-13, 2-15, 2-19, 11-35a]

*

Shostakovich, Dmitri, 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 87' (1951), Prelude 7, meas.

19 [4-6] Sohier, Charles-Joseph Balthazar (L’ Ainé), Symphony in F Minor, Op. 2, No. 6, Brook II, p. 666 (1751), 1, meas. 2—3

Appendix

283

°* Spohr, Ludwig, Violin Concerto No. 8 in A Minor (1816), i, meas. 1-10 [11-11] °* Vandenbroeck, Othon-Joseph, Symphony in E> Major, Brook II, p. 717 (1795), 1, meas.

1—4 [11-2]

°* Vanhal, Johann Baptist, Symphony in C Major, Bryan C9 (1772), i, meas. 1-4 [9-1b] ° , Symphony in C Major, Bryan C9 (1772), i, meas. 14-17 [9-2] O> *

°% °* °

, symphony

in C Major, Bryan C11

Violin Sonata, Op.

| (1721), No. 6, iii, Pastorale,

meas. 1—4 [7-7] , Violin Sonata, Op. 1 (1721), No. 2, iii, Siciliana, meas. 5—6 [7-24b] , Violin Sonata, Op. 1 (1721), No. 4, iv, meas. 2—3 [7-24a] , Sonate Accademiche, Op. 2 (1744), No. 3, 1, meas. 1-7 [10-43] , sonate Accademiche, Op. 2 (1744), No. 3, 1, meas. 9-11

*

*

meas.

, String Quartet No. 5 in A Major, Bryan A4 (1784), iv, meas. 1-2 [10-Sa, 11-15] , String Quartet No. 5 in A Major, Bryan A4 (1784), iv, meas. 80-83 [10-5b]

°% 0

* *

iv, “l’Allegrezza,”’

, string Quartet No. 3 in C Major, Bryan C1 (1773), i, meas. 20-21

°* Veracini, Francesco Maria,

°*

(1775),

1-4 after a minor mode introduction [9-18] , Symphony in D Minor, Bryan D2 (1777), ii, meas. 45—48 , Symphony in F Major, Bryan F5 (1771), i, meas. 1—4 [9-24]

Vogler, (Abbé) Georg Joseph, Piano Concerto in C Major (1778), 1, meas. 1—4 Wagenseil, Georg Christoph, Symphony in D Major, DTO (1746), ii, meas. 17-18 , symphony in E Major, WV 393 (1759), ii, meas. 18—20 Wagner,

Richard,

Die

Feen

(1833),

Overture,

meas.

9-16

after Piu

allegro

[11-27] 0x , symphony in C Major (1832), 11, meas. 1I5—17 [11-28] °* Weber, Carl Maria von, Clarinet Concerto in Eb Major, Op. 74 (1811), 1, meas. 54-58 [11-21] *

, Clarinet Concerto in Eb Major, Op. 74 (1811), 1, meas.

137-40

°* Werner, Gregor Joseph, Symphoniae sex senaeque sonatae (1735), Symphony No. 2, ii, meas. 1—4 [7-13]

om

om Ox

, Symphoniae sex senaeque sonatae (1735), Symphony No. 4, i, meas.

1-4 [7-11] , Symphoniae sex senaeque sonatae (1735), Symphony No. 5, iii, meas. 1-4 [7-12] , Symphoniae sex senaeque sonatae (1735), Symphony No. 6, iii, meas. 5-8 [7-16]

NOTES

Preface I. Fred Lerdahl and Ray Jackendoff, A Generative Theory of Tonal Music (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT

Press, 1983), pp. 288-89.

Chapter 1: What is a Schema? l. Ulrich Neisser, Cognition and Reality: Principles and Implications of Cognitive Psychology (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1976), p. 54.

Ww

. Frederick C. Bartlett, Remembering: A Study in Experimental and Social Psychology (New York:

Cambridge University Press, 1932), p. 201. . Selby H. Evans, “‘A Brief Statement of Schema Theory,” Psychonomic Science 8, no. 2 (1967): 87. . Stephen K. Reed, Psychological Processes in Pattern Recognition (New York: Academic Press,

1973), p. 26.

. Joseph P. Becker, ‘“‘A Model for the Encoding of Experiential Information,” in Computer Models of Thought and Language, ed. Roger C. Schank and Kenneth Mark Colby (San Francisco: W. H.

Freeman, 1973), p. 396.

. David E. Rumelhart, ““Schemata: The Building Blocks of Cognition,” in Theoretical Issues in Reading Comprehension, ed. Rand J. Spiro, Bertram C. Bruce, and William F. Brewer (Hillsdale,

N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1980), p. 41.

. Jean Matter Mandler, ‘‘Categorical and Schematic Organization in Memory,” in Memory Organization and Structure, ed. C. Richard Puff (New York: Academic Press, 1979), p. 263. See also

Jean Matter Mandler, Stories, Scripts, and Scenes: Aspects of Schema Theory (Hillsdale, N.J.:

Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1984). . Rumelhart, ““Schemata,”’ pp. 40-41. . Eleanor Gibson, Principles of Perceptual

Learning

and Development

(New

York:

Appleton-

Century-Crofts, 1969). Reproduced in Reed, Psychological Processes, p. 12. . See, for example, Carol L. Krumhans] and Mary A. Castellano, “‘Dynamic Processes in Music Perception,” Memory & Cognition 11 (1983): 325-34; and Thomas H. Stoffer, “Representation of

Phrase Structure in the Perception of Music,”’ Music Perception 3 (1985): 191-220.

. Burton S. Rosner and Leonard B. Meyer, ‘‘Melodic Processes and the Perception of Music,” in The Psychology of Music, ed. Diana Deutsch (New York: Academic Press, 1982), pp. 317-41. . Roger C. Schank and Robert P. Abelson, Scripts, Plans, Goals and Understanding: An Inquiry into Human Knowledge Structures (Hillsdale, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1977).

. Ibid., p. 41.

Notes to Pages 9-33

285

14. Ibid., pp. 70, 77, 99. 15. Rosner and Meyer, “‘Melodic Processes,” p. 327.

Chapter 2: A New Look at Musical Structure

7)

a

=

. George Mandler, “Organization, Memory, and Mental Structures,” in Memory Organization and Structure, ed. C. Richard Puff (New York: Academic Press, 1979), pp. 307-9. Mandler is more conservative than George A. Miller about tal structures accommodate. Miller, in his famous article Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing [1956]: 81-97), held that the brain typically relates five mental structure.

the number of elements that basic men““The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Information” (Psychological Review 63 to nine elements in a ‘‘chunk,”’ i.e., a

. Michael Friendly, ““Methods for Finding Graphic Representations of Associative Memory Structures,” in Memory Organization and Structure, p. 107. Harold Powers calls this the “fried-egg school of analysis” (a remark made at the 1982 annual

in

convention of the Society for Ethnomusicology). . Friendly, “Methods,” p. 125. . Among humanists, Hegel is frequently the source. For scientists, see Clifford Grobstein, “‘Hierarchical Order and Neogenesis,”” pp. 29-47, and Howard H. Pattee, ““The Physical Basis and Origin of Hierarchical Control,”’ pp. 71-108, in Hierarchy Theory: The Challenge of Complex Systems,

ed. Howard H. Pattee (New York: George Braziller, 1973).

. Mary Louise Serafine, in her article ““Cognition in Music” (Cognition 14 [1983]: 119-83), even questions whether isolated pitches are the best psychological representation of music at an immediate, low level of structure. . Heinrich Schenker, Free Composition (Der freite Satz), trans. and ed. Ernst Oster (New York:

Longman, 1979), pp. 4-5. Der frete Satz first appeared in 1935, the year of Schenker’s death.

. Felix Salzer, Structural Hearing: Tonal Coherence in Music, 2 vols. (New York: Dover Publications, 1962), 2: 79. 10. Joel Lester, Harmony in Tonal Music, 2 vols. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1982), 1: 176. 11. See Leonard B. Meyer, ‘‘Exploiting Limits: Creation, Archetypes, and Style Change,’ Daedalus 109, no. 2 (1980): 177-201; and Leonard G. Ratner, Classic Music: Expression, Form, and Stvle (New York: Schirmer Books, 1980). . Fred Lerdahl and Ray Jackendoff, ‘““Toward a Formal Theory of Tonal Music,”’ Journal of Music

Theory 21 (1977): 154-55.

13. Ibid., pp. 155-56. 14. Cf. Joseph Kerman, “How We Got into Analysis, and How to Get Out,” Critical Inquiry 7 (1980):

15. 17.

311-31.

Schank and Abelson, Scripts, Plans, Goals and Understanding, p. 41.

. Ibid., pp. 70, 77, 99.

“Gap-fill” is a term used by Leonard Meyer, referring to the scalar filling in of an initial melodic leap. See Leonard B. Meyer, Explaining Music: Essays and Explorations (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1973), p. 8.

. “Reversal before closure” is a Meyerian “plan.” In the context of a linear descent, Schumann's

reversal before closure is very similar to this earlier phrase by J. B. Bréval (Symphonie concertante

in F Major, Op. 38 [71795], iii, Presto, meas. 73-77):

PROCESS Sp

reversal

CLOSURE

286

Notes to Pages 34-51

19. Charles L. Cudworth, ‘‘Cadence galante: The Story of a Cliché,’ The Monthly Musical Record 79

(1949): 176. Cudworth’s work is discussed by Daniel Heartz, s.v. “Galant,” in The New Grove

Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan Publishers, 1980). 20. Heartz, ‘“‘Galant.”’ °

Chapter 3: Style Structures and Musical Archetypes 1. John R. Anderson, Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1980), p. 128. 2. In this context, “parametric entities” are musical patterns restricted to one of three dimensions—

pitch succession, durational proportion, or harmonic stability.

3. Eugene Narmour,

Beyond Schenkerism: The Need for Alternatives in Music Analysis (Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 1977), p. 164.

4. See especially chapter 11, ‘‘Idiostructure, Style Form, and Style Structure.”

5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.

Narmour, Beyond Schenkerism, p. 173. Ibid. Ibid., p. 164. Ibid., p. 174. Ibid. Ibid., pp. 174ff. Ibid., p. 175. Ibid., pp. 173-74. Ibid., p. 164. Ibid., pp. 177ff.

15. Ibid., p. 170. See also Leonard B. Meyer, Explaining Music: Essays and Explorations (Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 1973), pp. 6-7. 16. Estimations of the temporal characteristics of short-term memory vary greatly, not only because

short-term memory can be defined in many ways but also because individuals have differing abili-

ties. My use of “short-term logical present”? in W. Jay Academic Press, 1986), pp. 17. Northrop Frye, Anatomy of

memory” conforms in most respects to what is termed the “psychoDowling and Dane L. Harwood, Music Cognition (Orlando, Fla.: 179-81. Criticism (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1957).

18. Meyer, Explaining Music, p. 213.

19. 20. 21. 22.

Ibid., p. 214. Ibid., pp. 213-14. Ibid., p. 214. Meyer, “Exploiting Limits,” p. 204.

23. Rosner and Meyer, **Melodic Processes,”’ p. 318.

24. Meyer, Explaining Music, p. 91.

25. Leonard B. Meyer, Emotion and Meaning in Music (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1956),

26. 27. 28. 29.

pp. 85-86. Ibid., p. 93. Ibid., p. 92. Ibid., pp. 85-86. Ibid., p. 125.

30. Meyer, Explaining Music, p. 90.

31. 32. 33. 34.

Ibid., p. 174. Ibid. Ibid., p. 94. Meyer borrowed the notion of axial melodies from Narmour. Ibid., p. 183.

Notes to Pages 51-80 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40.

287

Ibid. Ibid., p. 191. Ibid. Ibid., pp. 213-26. Ibid., p. 213. Meyer, “Exploiting Limits,”’ pp. 180, 201n.

41. Meyer, Explaining Music, p. 72. 42. Meyer, “Exploiting Limits,” p. 201n. 43. Meyer, Explaining Music, p. 191.

44. Ibid., p. 213. 45. Meyer, “Exploiting Limits,” p. 182.

Chapter 4: Defining the Changing-Note Archetype 1. For instance, Leonard G. Ratner lists 1-7...4—3 as a “structural melody” in his Classic Music: Expression, Form, and Style (New York: Schirmer Books [Macmillan], 1980), p. 89.

2. Meyer, Explaining Music, pp. 191-96; idem, ““Grammatical Simplicity and Relational Richness: The Trio of Mozart’s G Minor Symphony,” Critical Inquiry 2 (1975): 693-761; idem, “‘Exploiting Limits,”’ p. 202n; and Rosner and Meyer, *‘Melodic Processes,” p. 325.

3. The 5—4...6—5 pattern is more characteristic of nineteenth- than eighteenth-century phrases. For example this phrase from Schubert’s Symphony No.

| in D Major, D82 (1813), ii, meas. 34—37:

Q7+@

o

4. Rumelhart, ‘“‘Schemata,”’ p. 34. 5. Endel Tulving, “Episodic and Semantic Memory,” in Organization of Memory, ed. Endel Tulving

and Wayne Donaldson (New York: Academic Press, 1972), pp. 381-403.

6. Jean M. Mandler, “Categorical and Schematic Organization,” pp. 159-99. 7. Janet L. Lachman and Roy Lachman, “Theories of Memory Organization and Human Evolution,”

in Memory Organization and Structure, ed. C. Richard Puff (New York: Academic Press, 1979), p. 163. The authors have redrawn data from Allan M. Collins and Elizabeth F. Loftus, “*A SpreadingActivation Theory of Semantic Processing,’’ Psychological Review 82 (1975): 407-28.

8. Becker, ‘‘Encoding of Experiential Information,” p. 410. 9. Ibid. Chapter 5: Schematic Norms and Variations

1. Narmour’s term ‘‘style structure’’ provides a useful alternative to such circumlocutions as “‘instantiation of a schema” or “‘actual example of a schematic category.” 2. Doubts have been raised as to the authenticity of this piece (see the list of Haydn’s works in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie [London: Macmillan Publishers,

1980]). For the present purpose, whether Haydn wrote the piece from which example 5-4a is taken does not really matter, for there is no question that it is indeed a bona fide eighteenth-century composition.

3. Default values are discussed in the first section of chapter 1.

288

Notes to Pages 88-134

4. Ina few instances (e.g., example 5-28) the two schema events are the subphrases. 5. Schematic ambiguity may even be the point of this and other deceptively simple phrases by the mature Beethoven.

6. See, for example, chapter 5 of Anderson, Cognitive Psychology.

Chapter 6: A Schema Across Time I. Henri Focillon, La vie des formes (Paris: Librairie Ernst Leroux, 1934); Forms in Art, trans. Charles Beecher Hogan and George Kubler (New Press, 1942). . The process of abstraction can involve more than averaging. For example, objects encountered in the world are “perfectly” round. Averaging the

English ed., The Life of Haven: Yale University few if any of the round shapes of hundreds of

apples, oranges, or bicycle wheels would not result in an exact circle. Yet the abstraction of circle may well be “perfect roundness.”’ One explanation for this might be that innate aspects of human vision constrain and influence the abstraction of visual schemata

in such a way as to lead to

idealizations such as circle, straight line, and so on. It is also possible that auditory proclivities constrain and influence the abstraction of musical schemata. If there exist innate abilities to recognize basic musical forms and processes, then these abilities could be used to “normalize” (not just to average) the central tendencies of a schema. While this is a significant possibility that demands careful study, at present so little is known of what is innate in musical cognition that I have not ventured to assign a historical function to auditory proclivities.

Chapter 7: 1720-1754: Scattered Examples I, 1720 is the date of the earliest example I have found of the 1—7...4—3 schema in concerted instru-

mental music; 1754 lies just prior to a sharp increase in the structure’s population and typicality curves. In compiling the population statistics used in this study I have adopted the expedient of tallying the examples in five-year blocks, e.g. 1720-24, 1725-29, etc. Thus the date 1754 repre-

sents the end of the segment 1750-54. . Reinhard Strohm, /talienische Opernarien des friihen Settecento (1 720- 1730) (Cologne: Arno Volk Verlag, 1976). . Compare, for example, this excerpt from the Finale of Mozart’s Symphony in C Major, KV 128 (1772), ili, meas. 12—13 (not a 1—7...4—3 structure but having a 1—2...7—1 bass).

I 4

mf—>-

L

roof )U UFO

J

—=

. See example 3-4, as well as Meyer, ‘‘Exploiting Limits,” p. 182.

. Other inferences are possible: Kirnberger may have been pedantically trying to regularize Bach’s counterpoint by resolving the dissonant ® earlier; nineteenth-century scholars may have then rejected Kirnberger’s alteration because they wanted a pure Urtext and were only too glad to dismiss

the authority of a minor composer who lacked “‘genius.”’

. Meyer notes this theme in “Exploiting Limits,”’ p. 205n. . Here ‘‘linkage”’ means only the use of a single connecting element and does not imply the broader Kniipftechnik as discussed by Heinrich Schenker, Arnold Schoenberg, and others.

Notes to Pages 137-212

289

Chapter 8: 1755-1769: Sharp Increases in Population and Typicality 1. “Symphony” is taken in the broadest sense to include overtures, sinfonie concertante, partitas, and those serenades arranged for performance as symphonies. 2. It is interesting to note that this structure is a radically altered version of a high-@ complex first heard in the tonic in measures 7-9: O_!

@3

OPO /\ @#0 3. This is made clearer after hearing the aria’s opening theme:

4. If, as Ihave suggested, the mental abstraction of a schema from various larger contexts can create a

predisposition for composing more autonomous and typical structures, and if creating more typical 1—7...4-—3

structures involves avoiding overlapping

processes,

then it seems probable that, to

compensate for the suppression of this “‘connective tissue,” composers needed to develop other means for creating musical continuity. That is, the increasing typicality of mid-level 1—7...4-3 style structures, in conjunction with changes in other mid-level structures, ought to have affected

the organization of higher-level structures. In Montezuma, Graun was requested by his patron Fred-

erick the Great to use the newer cabaletta aria form (a truncation of da capo form) recently introduced by Hasse. I am not suggesting that characteristic 1—7...4—3 style structures caused the development of the eighteenth-century cabaletta, but I do maintain that major changes in mid-level structures must have had some impact on structures at lower and higher levels.

Chapter 9: 1770-1779: The Peak 1. Anderson, Cognitive Psychology, p. 133. 2. Webster's New World Dictionary, 2d college ed., s.v. ““prototype.”’

3. Charles Rosen discusses this phrase in The Classical Style: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven (New York: W. W. Norton, 1972), pp. 90-91. 4. The “stretching of intervals” as a distinguishing feature of musical Romanticism has been suggested by Leonard B. Meyer. See his “Music and Ideology in the Nineteenth Century.”’ The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, Vol. VI: 1985, ed. Sterling M. MceMurrin (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1985). 5. Meyer discusses similar versions of this larger schema in “Exploiting Limits,” p. 187.

Chapter 10: 1780-1794: New Complications 1. Both these added melodies avoid the Bb—-A-G beginning of the second half of the “Batti, batt” theme. This descending third is a transposition down one step of the theme’s beginning, and as such

it forms another instance of the trend toward stepwise transposition of a 1—7...4—3 style structure's

290

Notes to Pages 217—239 conformant sections. The significance of this trend is that it breaks down one of the distinctions between 1—7...4—3 and 1—7...2—1

schemata. For instance, the following example from Haydn's

Symphony No. 101 could just as easily and perhaps more naturally have been a 1 —7...2—1 structure ({a] Haydn, Symphony No. 101 in D Major, “‘The Clock” [1793—94], i, Presto, meas. 81-84; [b] hypothetical 1-7...2—1

structure):

(a)

|



|

For both the “Batti, batti” theme and the Haydn example just mentioned this stepwise transposition allows an expressive upward leap to be made in the course of the second phrase half. In other words, schematic differentiation and typicality are traded for emotional affect. 2. The appoggiaturas indicated here are part of operatic performance tradition; they are present, for example, in the commercially available recording of this work, Philips 6707 029.

Chapter 11: 1795-1900: A Legacy 1. Meyer, “Exploiting Limits,”’ pp. 190-201. . 2. A distinction must be made between Schubert’s earlier and later compositions. He did not favor the ]—7...4—3 style structure in his mature works but did employ it in his youth. An example from the ‘Trout’’ Quintet has already been cited (see example 9-17). Among still earlier works, the opening

Allegro themes of both the First and Fifth Symphonies have 1—7...4—3 structures ({a] Schubert, Symphony No.

| in D Major [1813], i, Allegro, meas.

Major [1816], 1, meas. 5-12): (a)

|

ld ©

1-8; [b] Schubert, Symphony No. 5 in Bb

Fl.------

Notes to Pages 240-267

291

The progress Schubert was making away from highly closed forms is evident in comparing these themes. For example, whereas the First Symphony’s theme ends with an authentic cadence, the

Fifth Symphony's theme moves to a tonic six-four chord; and whereas the schema dyads in the First Symphony are direct, in the later work they are more indirect and less obvious.

. Transcribed from a radio broadcast.

BAN

. Transcribed from Nonesuch 71218; the key may be incorrect. . Psychologists have borrowed the word rehearsal from the performing arts. In studies of memory this term indicates a prompting or repetition of something to prevent its being forgotten. . Rey M. Longyear, Nineteenth-Century Romanticism in Music (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-

Hall, 1969), p. 26.

. Thomas Mann, Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkihn as Told by a Friend, trans. H. T. Lowe-Porter (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1948), p. 53.

. Adapted from Paul Mies, Beethoven’s Sketches: An Analysis of His Style Based on a Study of His Sketch-Books (London, 1929; reprint ed., New York: Dover Publications, 1974), p. 15. . As quoted in Joseph de Marliave, Beethoven’s Quartets (London, 1928; reprint ed., New Dover Publications, 1961), p. 305.

York:

. Deryck Cooke, Gustav Mahler: An Introduction to His Music (London: Cambridge University Press, 1980), p. 69.

. Alma Mahler (Werfel), Gustav Mahler: Memories and Letters (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1971), p. 24.

12. See, for example, Carl Dahlhaus, ed., Studien zur Trivialmusik des 19. Jahrhunderts (Regensburg,

1967); and Helga de la Motte-Haber, ed., Das Triviale in Literatur, Musik, und bildender Kunst (Frankfurt am Main, 1972). 13. Edward Garden, s.v. ‘““Rubinstein, Anton,” in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan Publishers, 1980). 14. As quoted in Edward T. Cone, ed., Berlioz: Fantastic Symphony (New York: W. W. Norton, 1971),

pp. 219, 237.

15. Ibid., p. 242. 16. Ibid., p. 241. 17. Hans Dieter Zimmermann, Schema-Literatur: desthetische Norm und literarisches System (Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer, 1979).

18. Transcribed from Nonesuch H-71298. 19. George Bernard Shaw, Shaw's Music, vol. 2 (London: The Bodley Head, 1981), p. 441. 20. Ibid., p. 191.

Chapter 12: Conclusions — kHwWN

. Cudworth, “Cadence galante,”’ pp. 176-78.

. Ibid., p. 178. . Ratner, Classic Music, p. 89.

. Wayne Slawson, review of The Psychology of Music, ed. Diana Deutsch, Music Theory Spectrum

5 (1983): 124.

rn

. Lerdahl and Jackendoff, A Generative Theory, p. 288. . Peter Nowell, Ian Cross, and Robert West, eds., Musical Structure and Cognition (London: Academic Press, 1985); and Dowling and Harwood, Music Cognition.

. James R. Meehan, “An Artificial Intelligence Approach to Tonal Music Theory,”” Computer Music Journal 4, no. 2 (1980): 64.

. Jeff Todd Titon, “Talking about Music: Analysis, Synthesis, and Song-Producing Models,”’ Essays in Arts and Sciences 6, no. 1 (1977): 56.

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INDEX

Page numbers in italics refer to the Appendix (a listing of individual musical examples referred to or presented in the text). Abelson, Robert P., definition of scripts and plans, 8-9, 32, 265-66, 285 nn. 15—16 Albrechtsberger, Johann Georg, 272 Analysis: intuitive, 7; problems in, 1x, 265; psychologically based, 9, 265-66; style analysis vs. critical analysis, 43—44, 52; with networks, 18, 20-22, 27, 38, 266; with tree structures, 17, 18, 20-30, 266. See also Schenkerian

analysis

Arban, Jean-Baptiste, 272 Archetypes: as constraints, 47; contrasted with schemata, 46; definition of, ix, 46-47, 52; Leonard B. Meyer and, ix, 27, 46-53, 265 Associative networks: in definition of schemata, 59; examples of, 59-63, figs.

4-1,2,3; representation of,

59-60 Attwood, Thomas, 34 Axial melodies, 51, fig. 3-8

Bach, Johann Sebastian, 222, 272 Baroque style, 117, 121, 210 Bartlett, Frederick C., 4, 9

Becker, Joseph P., 4, 61, 63 Beecke, Ignaz (Franz) von,

Cherubini, Luigi, 239, 274 Classic style, 210

Beethoven, Ludwig van, 239,

Complementary melodies, 49-51, 147-48, 178, fig. 3-7 Confidence, psychological, 94-95 Context: intrepretive, 3—4; role of, in feature percep-

272

272-73

Benda, Georg (Anton), 273 Berlioz, Hector, 257, 258,

259, 273

Berwald, Franz, 273

Binary subdivisions, nested, 18 Boccherini, Luigi, 273

Brahms, Johannes, 230, 256,

259, 261, 273 Bréval, Jean-Baptiste Sébastien, 273

Cambini, Giuseppe Maria, 274 Cardon, Jean-Guillain (le

pere), 274

Castellano, Mary A., 7, 284n.10

Changing-note archetype,

55-59, 63; bipartite form of, 55; definition of, 7—8, 9, 54; example of, ex. 1-3, ex. 3-4, figs. 3-9,10; fea-

tures of, 55-59; harmony

of, 5S—57; and Leonard B. Meyer, 51, 53; as network of associative schemata,

58-59; as scriptlike schema, 9

Clement, Muzio, 274

tion, 6

Cooke, Deryck, 254 Coordinate structure, 23; definition of, 12; example of,

12, 19-20, fig. 2-1, ex. 2-5

Corelli, Arcangelo, 274

Critical analysis, vs. style

analysis, 43-44, 52 Cudworth, Charles, 34, 264—

65, 267

Czemy, Carl, 130 Deceptive cadence, 30, 76 Default values: definition of, 7; in 1-—7...4—3 schema, 80-81, 210, 258 Dimensional representation,

14, 15, fig. 2-6, fig. 2-7

Dittersdorf, Carl Ditters von, 137, 274 Donizetti, Gaetano, 274 Dowling, W. Jay, 286n.16 Dvorsk, Antonin, 274 Dyads, melodic, 7, 78-84,

296

_—s Index

Dyads (continued)

89, 91; in medias res, 88, 183, 194. See also 1-7... 4-3 schema; Variation, of melodic dyads

Eberl, Anton, 239, 274

Eighteenth-century music, 222; high-level clarity in,

113; preference for scripts

in, 266 Elision, 89 Emergent properties, 19, 30 Evans, Selby, 4

Event schema. See Schemata Features: and schemata, 5-7, 33; musical, 6, 33

Fétis, Francois Joseph, 257 Fiala, Joseph, 274

Focillon, Henri, 103 Foreground/background effect,

182, 194, 208, 215, 224

Form, 47-48, 49 Freistimmigkeit, 110

Friendly, Michael, 14-18 Froberger, Johann Jakob,

274

Haydn, Franz Josef, 137, 142-50, 275-78 Heartz, Daniel, 34 Henselt, Adolf, 278 Hierarchy: and networks, 20, ex. 2-5; equation with treestructures, 18, 20 Historical frames, 102 Historical hypotheses, 100, 103

Idiostructures: analogies to,

46; definition of, 43; example of, 83, 229, ex. 3-Ic;

relationship with style

forms, 40; relationship with style structures, 40, 43, fig.

3-3 Information processing: bottom-up (data-driven), 6-7,

45, 85, 266; top-down (concept-driven), 7, 9, 45, 85,

266

Interpretive context, 3—4 127,

Frye, Northrop, 46 Fuzzy categorizations, 83, 264 Fuzzy sets, definition of, 95

Galant, 34, 265 Gap-fill archetype: example

of, ex. 1-2, 250; definition of, 7-8, 9; as planlike

schema, 9, 256 Garden, Edward, 256

Gassmann, Florian Leopold, 274

Gestalt law: of good continua-

tion, 48; of proximity, 89, 91

Gibson, Eleanor, 5-6

Gossec, Francois Joseph, 137, 274 Graun, Carl Heinrich, 136, 137, 138-42, 143, 155, 274-75 Grobstein, Clifford, 19,

285n.6

Harwood, Dane L., 286n.16 Hasse, Johann Adolf, 141

Jackendoff, Ray: reductionist analysis, 1x; recognition of archetypes, ix, 265; treestructure analysis, 27-30 Jommelli, Nicolo, 141 Kerman, Joseph, 285n.14 Kirnberger, Johann Philipp, 130, 222 Koestler, Arthur, 46 Krumhansl, Carol L., 7, 284n.10 Lachman, Janet L., 59-60, 287n.7 Lachman, Roy, 59-60, 287n.7 Lerdahl, Fred: reductionist

analysis, ix; recognition of archetypes, 1x, 265; treestructure analysis, 27—30

Lester, Joel, 23-27, 95 Longyear, Rey M., 251

Mahler, Alma, 255-56 Mahler, Gustav, 225, 254-56, 258, 261, 279

Mandler, George, 11, 12-14, 18 Mandler, Jean M., 4, 59 Mann, Thomas, 252 Massonneau, Louis, 279 Meehan, James R., 265-66 Méhul, Etienne-Nicolas, 279

Melodic complexes, 123-29, 136; descending triads, 159,

173—77, 182, 183, 184, 194, 205, 235; high @, 127-29, 137, 141, 143-45, 155, 158, 159, 173-74, 181, 182, 183-84, 192, 194, 203, 212, 247; linear descent, 123-27, 159, 166, 181, 187-88, 194, 206, 212, 230, 231, 235, 249, 252, 253 Memory: effect of, on population curve, 104—5, 262; long-term, 45; “rehearsal,”’ 250; schematic (episodic), 59; semantic (categorical), 59; short-term, 45, 64, 225, 235, 249-50, 286n. 16 Mendelssohn, Felix, 230, 279 Mercadante, Saverio, 279 Meyer, Leonard B., 46-53,

264; and archetypes, ix, 27,

46-47, 51-52, 238, 265; and axial melodies, 51; and changing-note melodies, 27, 51; and changing-note

archetypes, 53, 55-59, 63, 127; and complementary melodies, 49-51; and ex-

perimental validation of

musical schemata, 7—9; and form, 47-49; and gap-fill

archetypes, 32, and process,

48—49; and reversal before closure, 250, ex. 2-19, ex. 11-7, 285n.18; and schemata, 46; and symmetrical melodies, 49

Meyerbeer, Giacomo, 244

Miller, George A. 285n.2 Modulation: to the dominant, 67, 75-76; to the relative

major, 76

Monn, Matthias Georg, 279 Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus,

279-81; compared with Schumann, 30; in the

1770s, 159, 206; late sym-

Index

phonies of, 195-97, 219-225 Miiller, A. E., 28/ Narmour, Eugene, 39-46, 264, 265; and idiostructures, 40, 43-44, 46; and

schemata, 45-46; and style

forms, 40-41, 43-44, 45, 81; and style analysis vs.

critical analysis, 43-44; and

style structures, 40, 41-42, 43-44, 45, 81 Neisser, Ulrich, 4, 284n.1 Networks, 14; advantages of, 12, 18, 38, 266; compared to tree-structures, 17, 2022, 27, 38; examples of, 17, fig. 2-9, ex. 2-7

Nineteenth-century music: ag-

grandizement of phrases in,

235; stylistic anomalies in, 250; and 18th-century tradi-

tion, 230, 251-56, 25758, 264; plans vs. scripts in, 230, 256-57; and stretching of intervals, 188; prefer-

ence for plans in, 266; pref-

erence forx

1-—7...4—-3

style structure, 228

Normal distribution. See Population curve Normative abstraction, Leonard B. Meyer and, 1x Norms, 34, 46, 96; judging distance from, 68—70

1—7...2—1 style structure, 55,

58, 74, 226 1...7—4...3 style structure, 91-93, 127, 226 1—7...4—3 schema: abstraction of, 107, 120, 127, 134,

136; articulation of phrase

halves in, 149, 150, 153, 158; bass line of, 71-75, 107, 115, 121, 147 (see also Variation, of bass); bipartite form of, 145; characteristics of, 66—67; closure of, 81, 147, 228, 242-43, 254, 261, 264; conformant halves of, 88-92, 174-77, 178, 194, 219, 261; connec

297

tion with preceding and succeeding passages, 108, 134,

S-like contour of, 55, 57,

222—23 (see also

201, 224; stylistic anomalies among, 250; texture of,

138-42, 146-47, 210,

1-—7...4-—3 schema, linkage

in; 1-7...4—3 schema, overlapping processes in);

constituent style forms of,

102; decline of, 159, 244, 260-61; definition of, 6367, 81, 91; deformation of,

68, 83, 184, 231, 240,

242-44, 261, 264; duration

of, 169, 171, 225, 235; dyads, melodic, in, 65-66, 78-81, 123, 125, 149, 150, 182, 194 (see also Varia-

tion, of melodic dyads); early history of, 107-22;

embedding of, 87, 148, 192; ending in relative minor, 30; extension of, 88, 159, 197, 216-17; features of, 96; “golden age”’ of, 159; harmony of, 30, 93, 110 (see also Variation, of

harmony); historical range of, 63, 102, 110, 111, 117, 130, 134, 173, 244, 249,

261, 262; hypertrophy of, 235-39; inversion of melody and accompaniment in, 84; linear descent in, 30; linkage in, 134, 141; me-

lodic complexes in (see

Melodic complexes); mel-

ody of, 30, 65-66, 102,

110, 189; metric boundaries

in, 64, 85-86, 127, 147,

192; 172; for, 115,

norms, 66, 68-70, notational conventions 63—65; origin of, 108, 117, 129; overlapping

processes 187, 195, perception 149, 158,

in, 141-42, 159, 206, 222-23; of, 108, 113, 159, 182, 190,

192; population distribution

58; stepwise transposition of

subsidiary patterns in, 184,

156, 162, 171, 175-77; typicality of (see Typicality); unison writing in,

156, 181; variation of (see Variation). See also Melodic

complexes; Modulation; Prototype; Typicality; Variation Opera, Italian, 111, 129

Ordonez, Carlo d’, 134, 136,

281 Orlandini, Giuseppe Maria, 281

Parameters, musical, 40, 45 Pattee, Howard H., 19, 285n.6 Perception, context-dependent,

4

Pitch reduction, hierarchical, ix Plans: compared with scripts, 8-9; definition of, 8—9; in 19th-century phrases, 9, 32, 256, 260, 266 Pleyel, Ignaz, 28/ Pollarolo, Antonio, 136, 203, 281 Ponchielli, Amilcare, 230, 259-60, 28] Population curve: factors

affecting, 101-2, 104-5,

195, 262; normal distribution and, 100-104, 262 Poulenc, Francis, 28/ Process, 28-29 Prolongation. See Schenker, Heinrich; Lehrdahl, Fred;

Jackendoff, Ray

Proordinate structure, 23; defi-

nition of, 14; example of, 19-20, fig. 2-3, ex. 2-5

of, 107, 117, 137, 152-53,

Prototype: definitions of, 94,

of, 120, 161-73, 194 (see

near prototypes, 149-53,

159, 195, 229; prototypes

also Prototype); schema events in, 64, 67, 85-93, 96 (see also Variation, of

schema events); simplifi-

cation of, 144, 153, 181;

142, 162, 194; examples of

161-73; examples of, 161-73, 199-201, 254;

anc. population curve, 123,

159, 198, 264; and typicality curve, 103-4, 159,198

298

Index

Ragué, Louis-Charles, 28/ Ratner, Leonard, 27, 265, 287n.1 Recursion, 18—19 Reed, Stephen, 4

of, 100—104; rival, 6, 62;

Statistics: in schema valida-

9, 266; typicality and,

Romantic music. See Nine-

type; 1-7...4-—3 schema; Prototype; Schema events; Sonata form, as schema;

cerning, 100, 103, 264 Stoffer, Thomas H., 7, 284n.10 Strauss, Johann, Jr., 259 Structural frameworks. See Networks; Taxonomy; Treestructures Structural melody. See Ratner, Leonard Structural tones, 20—22 Structure: composite, 14; coordinate, 12, 19-20, 23, fig. 2-1, ex. 2-5; hierarchical,

Rigel, Henri-Joseph, 28/ teenth-century music

Rosetti, Antonio, 28/ Rosner, Burton S., 7, 9 Rossini, Gioachino, 28/ Rubinstein, Anton, 230, 259, 261, 282 Ruge, Filipo, 137, 282 Rumelhart, David, 4, 5; and characteristics of schemata, 4-5, 58, 66-67, 96 Salzer, Felix, 23-27, 95 Sammartini, Giovanni Battista, 143, 282 Scarlatti, Domenico, 134, 282 Schank, Roger C., definition

of scripts and plans, 8-9,

32, 265—66, 285 nn.15-—16 Schema events, 85; effect of melodic context on, 86-91; metric placement of, 85—86 Schema-musik, 230, 258-60, 261, 264 Schemata: abstraction of, 9, 34-37, 99, 103, 123, 134, 288n.2; as style structures, 39; cause for rise and fall of, 99; characteristics of, 4-7, 66-67; correlation of event schemata and assoClative networks, 61; default values of, 7, 80—81, 210, 258; definition of, 4, 39, 46, 58; effect of cultural

context on, 106; experiments concerning, 7; and

features, 5—7, 33; functions of, 190; galant cadence as, 34; instantiation of, 6-7; norms, 34, 96; organic

metaphor for, 99, 103, 123,

143, 238, 264-65; planlike, in 19th century, 9, 256,

266; population distribution

scriptlike, in 18th century, 103—4; validation of,

34-37. See also Arche-

types; Changing-note arche-

Style structures; Typicality

Schenker, Heinrich, 23, 45, 265

Schenkerian analysis: compared with network analysis, 23—27; limitations of treestructures in, 23, 95; op-

timized for harmony and

voice leading, 27; Ursatz as high-level schema in, 23, 265 Schneider, Franz, 282 Schubert, Franz, 230, 239, 282 Schumann, Robert, 259, 282; and 1—7...4—3 schema, 244, 247; on idée fixe, 257;

‘“Wehmut,’’ analysis of, 9,

27-33, 76, 95, 230, 249, 256

Scripts: compared with plans,

8—9; definition of, 8; in 18th-century phrases, 9, 32,

266; in 19th-century phrases, 256-57, 260

Serafine, Mary Louise, 285n.7 Serial structure. See Proordinate structure Set theory, 12

Seventeenth-century music, 113 Shaw, George Bernard, 259-60 Short-term memory. See

Memory

Shostakovich, Dmitri, 282 Slawson, Wayne, 265 Sonata form, as schema, 95, 100, 104, 106

Spohr, Ludwig, 283 Spontini, Gaspare, 244 Statistical sample: dating of

musical examples in, 270;

description of, 195, 262-64

tion, 34; hypotheses con-

20, fig. 2-5; musical, 11;

proordinate, 14, 19-20, 23,

fig. 2-3; in relation to his-

tory, 264; representations of, 11—18; subordinate, 13, 23, fig. 2-2, ex. 2-1

Style analysis, vs. critical analysis, 43-44, 52

Style forms: definition of, 41,

45; equated with features, 45; example of, 41, 101, 102; relationship with idiostructures, 40; relationship with style structures, 40, 41, 52, 81, fig. 3-2 Style galant See Galant

Style structures: definition of, 41; equated with schemata,

39, 45; example of, 42, ex. 3-2; relationship with idio-

structures, 40; relationship with style forms, 40, 41, 52, 81, fig. 3-2; two types

of, 42 Subordinate structure, 13, 23. See also Tree-structures Symmetrical patterns, 49-51. See also Axial melodies; Changing-note archetypes;

Complementary melodies Syntax, defined as process, 48

Taxonomy, 14, 16, 58, fig. 2-5 Titon, Jeff Todd, 267 Tree-structures, 14, 266; compared to networks, 27;

Index

example.of,

13, 17, 19,

23-30, fig. 2-8, ex. 2-3,

ex. 2-6; equation with hierarchy, 18; limitations of, 20-30, 265; and recursive

relationships, 18-19

Trivialliteratur, 258 Trivialmusik, 230, 256-60,

261 Tulving, Endel, 59 Typicality: and conventionality, 172—73, 230, 256; definition of, 94-95,

142;

in decline, 195; increasing, 107; and isolation from

larger context, 137, 138, re-

lation of, to population, 103-4, 107-8, 161, 230,

249, 250, 258, 264; relation

of, to range of variation, 152-53, 161, 195-97, 198 Ursatz. See Schenkerian

analysis

Vandenbroeck, Othon-Joseph,

283 Vanhal, Johann Baptist, 283 Variation: as in theme-andvariations movement, 68; of bass, 71-75, 77, 155, 181, 190, 222, 240; of form, 89, 197; of harmony, 75-77, 166, 198, 243; of melodic dyads, 78-84, 155-56, 164, 168, 183, 190, 192, 197, 203, 205, 208, 21017, 232, 240, 242, 246; of repetitions, 181, 210, 219-21; of schema as a whole, 93-95; of schema events, 85—93, 203, 216, 249; of texture, 88, 162; tonal and real variants, 187. See also 1,..7—4,..3 style structure; x 1-—7...4-3 style structure Veracini, Francesco Maria, 143, 283

299

Wagner, Richard, 230, 247,

254, 283 Weber, Carl Maria von, 239, 283 Werner, Gregor Joseph, 117-22, 283 Word painting, 32-33 x

—_—

1-7...4-3 style structure, 89, 93, 197, 226-28, 232, 238, 240, 242, 244, 246, 247, 249, 261; *““Wanderer”

pattern of, 240, 244, 247, 249, 261

Zimmermann, Hans Dieter, 258

Also of interest in the series:

Studies in the Criticism and Theory of Music

Beethoven’s Compositional Choices The Two Versions of Opus 18, No. 1, First Movement Janet M. Levy

;

“Performers as well as musical scholars will find much to ponder in her musical insights. . . . This is a book for the person who wants to learn about music, and who enjoys the challenge to think critically about how music makes its effects and how its discourse is advanced” — Bruce B. Campbell, Journal of Music Theory. “The author’s meticulously detailed, carefully reasoned, and eminently musical interpretations result in an aa ane contribution, one that challenges, instructs, and inspires us’— Malcolm S. Cole, sd Eighteenth Century: A Current Bibliography. “With this impressive publication, Janet Levy has substantially enriched Beethoven scholarship and the serious literature devoted to the aesthetics, criticism, and theory of music’ — Robert L. Marshall, Music aged OLE 1982. 112 pages, musical examples. Cloth, ISBN 0-8122-7850-X.

Blockley Hall, 418 Service Drive Philadelphia, PA 19104-6097 ISBN 0-8122-8075-X